Abstract

A US patent was issued to a commercial dishwashing detergent composition in which soluble zinc serves as an anti-corrosion agent. Since the detergents are used in a down-the-drain fashion, some of the detergents are discharged as wastewater and treated in publicly owned treatment works (POTWs). A risk assessment was previously conducted which focused on the nitrification processes in US POTWs. As a conservative pollutant, zinc removed from wastewater during treatment is transferred to sludges and at sufficiently high concentrations may inhibit the sludge treatment processes. In the present assessment, a probabilistic risk assessment was conducted to quantitatively determine the risk of zinc in the detergents to the anaerobic digestion processes in US POTWs. The procedure for POTW local limit development designed by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) was used as a reference when conducting the risk assessment. The assessment took into account the background zinc concentrations in POTW influents and was conducted at different market penetration rates (MPRs) for the US market of detergents based on the patented formula. Several factors were present that contributed to the conservativeness of the assessment. Results indicate that zinc in detergents does not present a significant risk to the anaerobic digestion processes in POTWs at a MPR up to 10%, with a probability of anaerobic digestion inhibition of below 1%.

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