1. Large-scale assessment of organic contaminant emissions from chemical and pharmaceutical manufacturing into Swiss surface waters.
- Author
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Anliker, Sabine, Santiago, Sergio, Fenner, Kathrin, and Singer, Heinz
- Subjects
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PHARMACEUTICAL chemicals manufacturing , *LIQUID chromatography-mass spectrometry , *INDUSTRIAL wastes , *SEWAGE , *EMISSIONS (Air pollution) , *WATER quality monitoring - Abstract
• Effluents of 11 WWTPs treating 0-100% industrial wastewater sampled for 2-3 months. • Emission source characterization based on unidentified temporal LC-HRMS signals. • Small shares (<5%) industrial wastewater strongly impact effluent characteristics. • Industrial wastewater left a variable, site-specific signature in the effluents. • Toxic components identified by correlating temporal HRMS with temporal effect data. This study presents a nation-wide assessment of the influence of chemical and pharmaceutical manufacturing (CPM) wastewaters on synthetic organic contaminant (SOC) emissions to Swiss surface waters. Geographic Information System (GIS) based analysis of the presence of CPM in wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) catchments revealed wide distribution of this industrial sector across Switzerland, suggesting that one-third of the 718 Swiss WWTPs may be influenced by CPM wastewaters. To reflect the diversity of this type of wastewaters, we investigated the effluents of 11 WWTPs of diverse sizes and technologies, which treated 0-100% wastewater from a variety of CPM activities. In an extensive sampling campaign, we collected temporally high resolved (i.e., daily) samples for 2-3 months to capture the dynamics of CPM discharges. The > 850 samples were then measured with liquid chromatography high-resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS). Non-target characterization of the LC-HRMS time series datasets revealed that CPM wastewaters left a highly variable and site-specific signature in the effluents of the WWTPs. Particularly, compared to WWTPs with purely domestic input, a larger variety of substances (up to 15 times more compounds) with higher maximum concentrations (1-2 orders of magnitude) and more uncommon substances were found in CPM-influenced effluents. Moreover, in the latter, highly fluctuating discharges often contributed to a substantial fraction of the overall emissions. The largely varying characteristics of CPM discharges between different facilities were primarily related to the type of activities at the industries (i.e. , production versus processing of chemicals) as well as to the pre-treatment and storage of CPM wastewaters. Eventually, for one WWTP, LC-HRMS time series were correlated with ecotoxicity time series obtained from bioassays and major toxic components could be identified. Overall, in view of their potential relevance to water quality, a strong focus on SOC discharges from CPM is essential, including the design of situation-specific monitoring, as well as risk assessment and mitigation strategies that consider the variability of industrial emissions. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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