Abstract

The exposure of bottled water to sunlight leaches heavy metals into the water, thereby deteriorating its quality and this informed the study. Three plastic bottle brands (n = 100 per brand) were exposed to sunlight for different durations. The leaching of contaminants was exposure duration dependent. The following ranges were recorded for temperature (26.67-29.83 °C), pH (4.73-6.12), conductivity (159.00-298.67 μs/cm), turbidity (0.92-1.22 N.T.U), TDS (98.17-192.77 mg/l), hardness (38.12-78.17 mg/l), Fe (0.01-0.57 mg/l), Mn (BDL - 0.46), Cr (BDL - 0.37 mg/l), Al (BDL - 0.53 mg/l), Cd (0.02-0.21 mg/l), Zn (1.18-9.90 mg/l), Pb (0.03-1.68 mg/l), As (BDL - 1.48 mg/l), and Ni (0.05-1.55 mg/l). Health risk evaluation in all bottled water brands revealed possible Cr, Cd, Pb, As, and Ni toxicity. The carcinogenic risk of Cr, As, and Ni, indicated potential cancer. Arsenic posed the highest non-carcinogenic risk, while Ni posed the highest carcinogenic risk in all brands after 42 days of exposure. The microbial parameters failed to meet the WHO safety limits. The exposure of bottled water to sunlight should be avoided, to ensure a healthy population.

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