Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4480956 Water Research 2016 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•In the suspect screening, data were screened for the presence of a large set of anthropogenic chemicals.•700 detected compounds from LC-HRMS screening data were linked to one or multiple suspects.•From over 5200 chemicals we prioritized 174 suspects for their health relevance for drinking water.•The prioritized suspects are relevant for detailed future risk assessment.•The relatively fast approach shows to be complementary to currently used target-based approaches.

For the prioritization of more than 5200 anthropogenic chemicals authorized on the European market, we use a large scale liquid chromatography-high resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS) suspect screening study. The prioritization is based on occurrence in 151 water samples including effluent, surface water, ground water and drinking water.The suspect screening linked over 700 detected compounds with known accurate masses to one or multiple suspects. Using a prioritization threshold and removing false positives reduced this to 113 detected compounds linked to 174 suspects, 24 compounds reflect a confirmed structure by comparison with the pure reference standard. The prioritized compounds and suspects are relevant for detailed risk assessments after confirmation of their identity. Only one of the 174 prioritized compounds and suspects is mentioned in water quality regulations, and only 20% is mentioned on existing lists of potentially relevant chemicals. This shows the complementarity to commonly used target-based methods.The semi-quantitative total concentration, expressed as internal standard equivalents of detected compounds linked to suspects, in effluents is approximately 10 times higher than in surface waters, while ground waters and drinking waters show the lowest response. The average retention time, a measure for hydrophobicity, of the detected compounds per sample decreased from effluent to surface- and groundwater to drinking water, confirming the occurrence of more polar compounds in drinking water. The semi-quantitative total concentrations exceed the conservative and precautionary threshold of toxicological concern. Therefore, adverse effects of mixtures cannot be neglected without a more thorough risk assessment.

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Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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