Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4414508 | Chemosphere | 2008 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Three sulfonamides - para-toluenesulfonamide (p-TSA), ortho-toluenesulfonamide (o-TSA) and benzenesulfonamide (BSA) - have recently been detected in groundwater within a catchment area of one drinking water treatment plant (DWTP), which is located downstream of a former sewage farm. The degradation pathways of p-TSA, o-TSA and BSA were investigated during drinking water treatment with incubation experiments and an experimental filter. Incubation experiments showed that p-TSA is removed during the treatment by microbiological processes. Removal of p-TSA is performed by adapted microorganisms only present in polluted groundwater. The elimination in an experimental filter of 1.6 m length applying filtration velocities from 2 to 6 m hâ1 was â¼93% of p-TSA. The microbial degradation rates in the incubation experiment were â¼0.029 μg lâ1 hâ1 (zero order reaction). In the experimental filter, the reaction rate constants were around 0.0063 sâ1 for all filtration velocities (1st order reaction). Drinking water treatment does not reduce the concentration of o-TSA and BSA under conditions encountered in Berlin. p-TSA, o-TSA and BSA were only measured in the low μg lâ1 concentrations range in the purified water.
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Authors
Doreen Richter, Gudrun Massmann, Uwe Dünnbier,