Fate of Sulfamethoxazole, 4-Nonylphenol, and 17β-Estradiol in Groundwater Contaminated by Wastewater Treatment Plant Effluent (original) (raw)

2009, Environmental Science & Technology

Organic wastewater contaminants (OWCs) were measured in samples collected from monitoring wells located along a 4.5km transect of a plume of groundwater contaminated by 60 years of continuous rapid infiltration disposal of wastewater treatment plant effluent. Fifteen percent of the 212 OWCs analyzed were detected, including the antibiotic sulfamethoxazole (SX), the nonionic surfactant degradation product 4-nonylphenol (NP), the solvent tetrachloroethene (PCE), and the disinfectant 1,4-dichlorobenzene (DCB). Comparison of the 2005 sampling results to data collected from the same wells in 1985 indicates that PCE and DCB are transported more rapidly in the aquifer than NP, consistent with predictions based on compound hydrophobicity. Natural gradient in situ tracer experiments were conducted to evaluate the subsurface behavior of SX, NP, and the female sex hormone 17-estradiol (E2) in two oxic zones in the aquifer: (1) a downgradient transition zone at the interface between the contamination plume and the overlying uncontaminated groundwater and (2) a contaminated zone located beneath the infiltration beds, which have not been loaded for 10 years. In both zones, breakthrough curves for the conservative tracer bromide (Br-) and SX were nearly coincident, whereas NP and E2 were retarded relative to Brand showed mass loss. Retardation was greater in the contaminated zone than in the transition zone. Attenuation of NP and E2 in the aquifer was attributed to biotransformation, and oxic laboratory microcosm experiments using sediments from the transition and contaminated zones show that uniform-ringlabeled 14 C 4-normal-NP was biodegraded more rapidly (30-60% recovered as 14 CO 2 in 13 days) than 4-14 C E2 (20-90% recovered as 14 CO 2 in 54 days). There was little difference in mineralization potential between sites.

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Assessment of Intrinsic Biodegradation Potentials in an Aquifer Contaminated with Chlorinated Ethenes in the Vicinity of Nowa Deba

Ecological Chemistry and Engineering S, 2013

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Remediation Journal, 2012

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