The Science of the total environment | 2021

Occurrence of organophosphate esters in surface water and sediment in drinking water source of Xiangjiang River, China.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


In this study, we investigated the occurrence of organophosphate esters (OPEs) in the surface water and sediments of the Xiangjiang (XJ) River, a drinking water source of Changsha City. The total concentrations of five detected OPEs (Σ5OPEs) in surface water and tap water were 6.07-25.3 ng L-1 (average 14.9 ± 4.98 ng L-1), and 23.6 ng L-1, respectively, and four detected OPEs (Σ4OPEs) in sediments were 3.74-27.5 ng g-1 dw (average 12.1 ± 6.48 ng g-1 dw). Tris-2-chloroisopropyl phosphate (TCIPP) was the dominant contributor in water and sediment samples, accounting for over 40% of ΣOPEs. A particular flood event during July-August 2020 reduced the level of OPEs in river water, leading to generally uniform OPE concentrations in surface water and sediment samples from the upper, middle, and lower reaches of XJ. Principal component analysis-multiple linear regression (PCA-MLR) results indicated that the main sources of OPEs in the surface water and sediments of XJ were emissions of waste-water treatment plants and anthropocentric activities. The results of ecological and human health risk assessments indicated that all OPEs posed a low or negligible ecological risk for algae, daphnia, and fish, and negligible risk for human health. Interestingly, the concentration and human health risk of OPEs in a composite tap water sample was generally higher than those in river water samples, indicating possible OPE contamination from water treatment processes or transportation through pipe networks.

Volume 781
Pages \n 146734\n
DOI 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.146734
Language English
Journal The Science of the total environment

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