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  • Attenuation of contaminants of emerging concern during surface-spreading aquifer recharge.

Attenuation of contaminants of emerging concern during surface-spreading aquifer recharge.

The Science of the total environment (2011-01-08)
Bonnie V Laws, Eric R V Dickenson, Theodore A Johnson, Shane A Snyder, Jörg E Drewes
ABSTRACT

The attenuation of a diverse suite of contaminants of emerging concern (CECs) and bulk water quality changes was evaluated at a surface-spreading aquifer recharge operation across a detailed subsurface profile (9 locations), representing both short- and long-travel times (10 h to 60 days). Seventeen CECs were detected in the recharge basin and the concentrations of all were reduced during soil aquifer treatment (SAT), with 11 of the target compounds attenuated by >80% after 60 days of travel time. Select CECs (atenolol, gemfibrozil, N,N-diethly-3-methylbenzamide, meprobamate, tris(2-chloroethyl)phosphate, and primidone) and bulk water organic-carbon measurements (total organic carbon, biodegradable organic carbon, size-exclusion chromatography and fluorescence excitation-emission matrices) were identified as monitoring parameters that can be used to assess SAT performance at surface-spreading operations.