AWWA WQTC58963 PDF

AWWA WQTC58963 PDF

Name:
AWWA WQTC58963 PDF

Published Date:
11/02/2003

Status:
Active

Description:

Trace-Level Wastewater-Related Compounds in New Jersey's Streams and their Persistence through a Conventional Water Treatment Plant

Publisher:
American Water Works Association

Document status:
Active

Format:
Electronic (PDF)

Delivery time:
10 minutes

Delivery time (for Russian version):
200 business days

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$7.2
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Water samples collected at 33 sites on 23 streams throughout New Jersey and at select locations throughout a conventional water-treatment plant were analyzed to determine the concentrations of over 100 organic wastewater-related compounds (OWCs) including antibiotics and other pharmaceutically active compounds, fragrances, flame-retardants, plasticizers, plant and animal steroids, detergent metabolites, pesticides, byproducts of oil use and combustion, and other extensively used chemicals. Many of these compounds are likely derived from effluent from municipal wastewater-treatment (WWT) plants. Some compounds, however, such as pesticides and plant steroids could be derived from nonpoint or nonanthropogenic sources. Samples of raw water, settled water, filtered water, and finished water from the water-treatment plant and from the two streams that provide raw water to the plant were collected weekly for a 4-week period. Several compounds including fragrances, pharmaceuticals, flame retardants, and plasticizers that were frequently detected in samples of stream water and raw-water supplies also were frequently detected in samples collected throughout the WT plant, indicating that these compounds resist removal through conventional WT processes. Other compounds frequently detected in samples of stream water and raw water supplies including pharmaceuticals, plant and animal steroids, disinfectants, and detergent metabolites were not detected in samples of finished water, indicating that concentrations of these compounds are effectively reduced to levels less than analytical detection limits or that the compounds are transformed through conventional water-treatment processes to degradates not determined by the methods used in this study. Includes abstract only.
Edition : Vol. - No.
File Size : 1 file , 200 KB
Note : This product is unavailable in Ukraine, Russia, Belarus
Number of Pages : 1
Published : 11/02/2003

History


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