Abstract

In this study, the occurrence in wastewater of two non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), naproxen and ibuprofen, and one personal care product, triclosan, was assessed using the polar organic chemical integrative sampler (POCIS). The samplers were initially calibrated in the laboratory to obtain sampling rates ( R s ) for each target compound followed by deployment in the influent and effluent of Goudkoppies and Northern Wastewater Treatment Plants (WWTPs), South Africa. Exposure was done for 14 days in 2012. High performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) system with ultraviolet (UV) and fluorescence (FLD) detectors was used to analyse POCIS extracts. Laboratory calibration of POCIS yielded R s values for the three compounds that were between 0.087 and 0.383 l∙d-1 in quiescent conditions, and 0.125 and 0.936 l∙d -1 in stirred conditions. From the accumulated amounts in field-deployed samplers, estimated freely dissolved concentrations of the studied compounds in wastewater influent ranged from 55.0 to 78.4 μg∙l -1 and 52.3 to 127.7 μg∙l -1 in Goudkoppies and Northern WWTPs, respectively. Average concentrations of these compounds in the treated effluent ranged from 10.7 to 13.5 μg∙l -1 in Goudkoppies WWTP, and 20.4 to 24.6 μg∙l -1 in Northern WWTP. Analyte removal efficiencies varied between 68 and 86% in Goudkoppies WWTP and 61 and 82% in Northern WWTP. Grab samples processed by SPE method yielded higher analyte concentrations (up to three-fold) as compared to POCIS-derived estimates. This discrepancy was attributed to SPE’s ability to extract both the free dissolved, and particle sorbed fractions of the contaminants.

Highlights

  • Pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCPs) comprise an emerging and very diverse group of polar organic contaminants characterised by active functional groups designed to elicit certain physiological responses in target organisms

  • PPCP uptake by polar organic chemical integrated sampler (POCIS) can be determined based on the decline in water concentrations over time (Macleod et al, 2007) or the amounts of analytes accumulated in the device over the exposure period (Mazzella et al, 2007; Togola and Budzinski, 2007)

  • This work assessed the viability of POCIS as a sampling technique for determining naproxen, ibuprofen, and triclosan in wastewater

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Summary

Introduction

Pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCPs) comprise an emerging and very diverse group of polar organic contaminants characterised by active functional groups designed to elicit certain physiological responses in target organisms. Determination of the sampling rates (Rs) for the target compounds in the POCIS was undertaken under laboratory conditions and the resultant Rs values applied to field deployments of the samplers at 2 WWTPs serving Johannesburg city, South Africa. A comparison of the POCISderived analyte concentrations with values obtained from grab samples from the same sites as processed using solid phase extraction was done.

Results
Conclusion

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