Attenuation of contaminants of emerging concern during surface-spreading aquifer recharge |
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Authors: | Laws Bonnie V Dickenson Eric R V Johnson Theodore A Snyder Shane A Drewes Jörg E |
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Affiliation: | a Advanced Water Technology Center (AQWATEC), Environmental Science and Engineering Division, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO 80401, USAb Water Replenishment District of Southern California (WRD), Lakewood, CA, USAc Applied Research and Development Center (ARDC), Water Quality Research and Development Division, Southern Nevada Water Authority, Henderson, NV 89015, USA |
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Abstract: | The attenuation of a diverse suite of contaminants of emerging concern (CECs) and bulk water quality changes was evaluated at a surface-spreading aquifer recharge operation across a detailed subsurface profile (9 locations), representing both short- and long-travel times (10 h to 60 days). Seventeen CECs were detected in the recharge basin and the concentrations of all were reduced during soil aquifer treatment (SAT), with 11 of the target compounds attenuated by > 80% after 60 days of travel time. Select CECs (atenolol, gemfibrozil, N,N-diethly-3-methylbenzamide, meprobamate, tris(2-chloroethyl)phosphate, and primidone) and bulk water organic-carbon measurements (total organic carbon, biodegradable organic carbon, size-exclusion chromatography and fluorescence excitation-emission matrices) were identified as monitoring parameters that can be used to assess SAT performance at surface-spreading operations. |
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Keywords: | Contaminants of emerging concern Managed aquifer recharge Surface spreading Soil aquifer treatment Indirect potable reuse |
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