Waterworks-specific composition of drinking water disinfection by-products

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Date
2019Author
Andersson, Anna
Kylin, Henrik
Harir, Mourad
Gonsior, Michael
Hertkorn, Norbert
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Reactions between chemical disinfectants and natural organic matter (NOM) upon drinking water treatment result in formation of potentially harmful disinfection by-products (DBPs). The diversity of DBPs
formed is high and a large portion remains unknown. Previous studies have shown that non-volatile DBPs
are important, as much of the total toxicity from DBPs has been related to this fraction. To further understand the composition and variation of DBPs associated with this fraction, non-target analysis with ultrahigh
resolution Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FT-ICR MS) was employed to detect DBPs at four Swedish waterworks using different types of raw water and treatments. Samples were
collected five times covering a full year. A common group of DBPs formed at all four waterworks was
detected, suggesting a similar pool of DBP precursors in all raw waters that might be related to phenolic
moieties. However, the largest proportion (64–92%) of the assigned chlorinated and brominated molecular
formulae were unique, i.e. were solely found in one of the four waterworks. In contrast, the compositional
variations of NOM in the raw waters and samples collected prior to chemical disinfection were rather limited. This indicated that waterworks-specific DBPs presumably originated from matrix effects at the point
of disinfection, primarily explained by differences in bromide levels, disinfectants (chlorine versus chloramine) and different relative abundances of isomers among the NOM compositions studied. The large variation of observed DBPs in the toxicologically relevant non-volatile fraction indicates that non-targeted monitoring strategies might be valuable to ensure relevant DBP monitoring in the future
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/32437https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlepdf/2019/ew/c9ew00034h?page=search
https://doi.org/10.1039/C9EW00034H