Correlation of six anthropogenic markers in wastewater, surface water, bank filtrate, and soil aquifer treatment

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearch

Authors

Six trace contaminants (acesulfame (ACE), sucralose (SUC), carbamazepine (CBZ), diatrizoic acid (DTA), 1H-benzotriazole (BTZ) and its 4-methyl analogue (4-TTri)) were traced from wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) to receiving waters and further to riverbank filtration (RBF) wells to evaluate their prediction power as potential wastewater markers. Furthermore, the persistence of some compounds was investigated in advanced wastewater treatment by soil aquifer treatment (SAT). During wastewater treatment in four conventional activated sludge WWTPs ACE, SUC, and CBZ showed a pronounced stability expressed by stable concentration ratios in influent (in) and effluent (out) (ACE/CBZ: in45, out40; SUC/CBZ: in1.8, out1.7; and ACE/SUC: in24, out24). In a fifth WWTP, additional treatment with powdered activated carbon led to a strong elimination of CBZ, BTZ, and 4-TTri of about 80% and consequently to a distinctive shift of their ratios with unaffected compounds. Data from a seven month monitoring program at seven sampling locations at the rivers Rhine and Main in Germany revealed the best concentration correlation for ACE and CBZ (r2 = 0.94) and also a good correlation of ACE and CBZ concentrations to BTZ and 4-TTri levels (r2 = 0.66 to 0.82). The comparison of ratios at different sampling sites allowed for the identification of a CBZ point source. Furthermore, in Switzerland a higher consumption of SUC compared to Germany can be assumed, as a steadily increasing ACE/SUC ratio along the river Rhine was observed. In RBF wells a good correlation (r2 = 0.85) was again observed for ACE and CBZ. Both also showed the highest stability at a prolonged residence time in the subsurface of a SAT field. In the most peripheral wells ACE and CBZ were still detected with mean values higher than 36 µg L−1 and 1.3 µg L−1, respectively. Although SUC concentrations in wastewater used for SAT decreased by more than 80% from about 18 µg L−1 to 2.1 µg L−1 and 3.5 µg L−1 in these outlying wells, the compound was still adequate to indicate a wastewater impact in a qualitative way.
Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Environmental Monitoring
Volume13
Issue number4
Pages (from-to)966-973
Number of pages8
ISSN1464-0325
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 04.2011

DOI

Recently viewed

Activities

  1. Wie unterstützt der ‚Later Life Work Index‘ Unternehmen und Organisationen im demographischen und digitalen Wandel?
  2. Do Good Things Come in Small Packages’? Issue Packages in Negotiation and Their Effect on Dyadic Economic Outcomes.
  3. Vortrag und Workshop (Einladung): Fachliches und inklusives Lernen – (wie) geht beides im Naturwissenschaftsunterricht?
  4. Sportspiel in der Grundschule: Zur Vermittlung von Spielfähigkeit mithilfe von digital-gestützten Lehr-/Lernprozessen
  5. Mit Mysteries zu Forschendem Lernen im Chemieunterricht – das Projekt.: Vortrag auf der GDCP Tagung (mit Anja Lembens)
  6. Social and ethical aspects in sustainability performance measurement and assessment. A systematic literature review
  7. Marketing of Public and Non-Profit Organisations Understanding Audiences and how to Persuade them in Public and NPO
  8. Inquiry-based Learning Environment to Welcome Diversity in Chemistry Classes: Vortrag mit Sandra Puddu & Anja Lembens
  9. Endurance and disappearance as two sides of the same coin: How the search for impact shaped an artistic organization
  10. (W)Ende der Zensur?: Adaptionsschwierigkeiten ostdeutscher AutorInnen an die Literaturproduktion unter Marktbedingungen
  11. Determinants and management consequences of normative views of sustainability in Namibian commercial cattle farming
  12. Focusing on enquiry-based science education within a European in-service teacher education programme, mit Anja Lembens
  13. Berufliche Anforderungen im inklusiven Chemieunterricht., mit Christine Heidinger, Brigitte Koliander und Thomas Plotz

Publications

  1. Evaluating OWL 2 reasoners in the context of checking entity-relationship diagrams during software development
  2. Praxisphasen im Lehramtsstudium mit Schwerpunkt auf der Einbindung neu zugewanderter Schülerinnen und Schüler
  3. Breites Maßnahmenpaket zum Klimaschutz kann Kosten der Emissionsminderung in Deutschland deutlich verringern
  4. Zur Bedeutung der Selbstwirksamkeit für eine individuelle Förderung im Unterricht mit heterogenen Lerngruppen
  5. Die Augen essen mit. Kulinarisches Kino als Gastrosophie und Forschungsfeld interdisziplinärer Ernährungskultur
  6. Eine Familie und ihre Körper. Essensbezogene Gebrauchsweisen des Körpers in Louis Malles "Eine Komödie im Mai"
  7. Sustainability Education and Accounting Experience. What Motivates Higher Valuation of Environmental Performance
  8. Thermodynamic study of a LiBr–H2O absorption process for solar heat storage with crystallisation of the solution
  9. Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and goethite promote carbon sequestration via hyphal-aggregate mineral interactions
  10. Business Model Experimentation for Circularity: Driving sustainability in a large international clothing retailer
  11. Ein kleiner Ausblick: Forschungskorridore zum "fachdidaktischen Code" der Lebenswelt- und/oder Situationsorientierung
  12. Bodenentwicklungen und Bodenbelastungen der Mäanderschleife Wehninger Werder an der niedersächsischen Mittelelbe
  13. Untersuchungs- und Monitoringkonzept zur Abschätzung der Auswirkungen von Offshore-Windparks auf die marine Umwelt
  14. Modification of the umu-assay (ISO 13829) accounting for cytotoxicity in genotoxicity assessment: A preliminary study
  15. Modellierung von klimainduzierten Veränderungen des Bodenwasserhaushalts von Auenböden an der unteren Mittelelbe.
  16. Interactions between species richness, herbivory and precipitation affect standing biomass in Mongolian rangelands
  17. Tree cover mediates the effect on rapeseed leaf damage of excluding predatory arthropods, but in an unexpected way
  18. Book Review: Markets and the Environment, Nathaniel O. Keohane and Sheila M. Olmstead, Washington, DC: Island Press, 2007