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Dive into the research topics where Emilie Caupos is active.

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Featured researches published by Emilie Caupos.


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2014

Micropollutants in urban stormwater: occurrence, concentrations, and atmospheric contributions for a wide range of contaminants in three French catchments

Johnny Gasperi; Christel Sebastian; V. Ruban; M. Delamain; S. Percot; Laure Wiest; Cécile Mirande; Emilie Caupos; D. Demare; M. Diallo Kessoo; M. Saad; Jj Schwartz; P. Dubois; C. Fratta; Hélène Wolff; Régis Moilleron; Ghassan Chebbo; Cécile Cren-Olivé; Maurice Millet; Sylvie Barraud; Marie-Christine Gromaire

This study aimed at: (a) providing information on the occurrence and concentration ranges in urban stormwater for a wide array of pollutants (n = 77); (b) assessing whether despite the differences between various catchments (land use, climatic conditions, etc.), the trends in terms of contamination level are similar; and (c) analyzing the contribution of total atmospheric fallout (TAF) with respect to sources endogenous to this contamination. The studied contaminants include conventional stormwater contaminants (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), Zn, Cu, Pb, etc.), in addition to poorly or undocumented pollutants such as nonylphenol and octylphenol ethoxylates (NPnEO and OPnEO), bisphenol A (BPA), polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), a wide variety of pesticides, and various metals of relevance (As, Ti, Sr, V). Sampling and analysis were performed using homogeneous methods on three urban catchments with different land use patterns located in three distinct French towns. For many of these pollutants, the results do not allow highlighting a significant difference in stormwater quality at the scale of the three urban catchments considered. Significant differences were, however, observed for several metals (As, Cr, Cu, Ni, Sr and Zn), PAHs, and PBDEs, though this assessment would need to be confirmed by further experiments. The pollutant distributions between dissolved and particulate phases were found to be similar across the three experimental sites, thus suggesting no site dependence. Lastly, the contributions of TAF to stormwater contamination for micropollutants were quite low. This finding held true not only for PAHs, as previously demonstrated in the literature, but also for a broader range of molecules such as BPA, NPnEO, OPnEO, and PBDEs, whose high local production is correlated with the leaching of urban surfaces, buildings, and vehicles.


Water Research | 2011

Photodegradation of estrone enhanced by dissolved organic matter under simulated sunlight

Emilie Caupos; Patrick Mazellier; Jean-Philippe Croué

In the present work the degradation of estrone (E1) a natural estrogenic hormone has been studied under simulated solar irradiation. The photodegradation of E1 has been investigated in the absence and in the presence of 7.7-8.9 mg L(-1) of dissolved organic carbon (DOC), under solar light simulation with irradiance approximating that of the sun. DOC extracts from different origins have been used. Half-lives ranging between 3.9 h and 7.9 h were observed. Results indicated that E1 was photodegraded even in the absence of DOC. The presence of DOC was found to enhance the degradation of E1. Experiments performed with the addition of reactive species scavengers (azide ions and 2-propanol) have shown that these two species play a significant role in the photodegradation. Some experiments have been performed with a DOC previously submitted to solar irradiation. Changes in optical and physico-chemical properties of DOC strongly affect its photoinductive properties, and hence its efficiency on E1 degradation. A part of the study consisted in the investigation of photoproducts structures. Five photoproducts were shown by chromatographic analysis: one arising from direct photolysis and the four others from DOC photoinduced degradation.


Science of The Total Environment | 2016

Removal of a wide range of emerging pollutants from wastewater treatment plant discharges by micro-grain activated carbon in fluidized bed as tertiary treatment at large pilot scale

R. Mailler; Johnny Gasperi; Y. Coquet; Audrey Buleté; Emmanuelle Vulliet; Steven Deshayes; Sifax Zedek; C. Mirande-Bret; V. Eudes; A. Bressy; Emilie Caupos; Régis Moilleron; Ghassan Chebbo; Vincent Rocher

Among the solutions to reduce micropollutant discharges into the aquatic environment, activated carbon adsorption is a promising technique and a large scale pilot has been tested at the Seine Centre (240,000 m(3)/d - Paris, France) wastewater treatment plant (WWTP). While most of available works studied fixed bed or contact reactors with a separated separation step, this study assesses a new type of tertiary treatment based on a fluidized bed containing a high mass of activated carbon, continuously renewed. For the first time in the literature, micro-grain activated carbon (μGAC) was studied. The aims were (1) to determine the performances of fluidized bed operating with μCAG on both emerging micropollutants and conventional wastewater quality parameters, and (2) to compare its efficiency and applicability to wastewater to former results obtained with PAC. Thus, conventional wastewater quality parameters (n=11), pharmaceuticals and hormones (PPHs; n=62) and other emerging pollutants (n=57) have been monitored in μGAC configuration during 13 campaigns. A significant correlation has been established between dissolved organic carbon (DOC), PPHs and UV absorbance at 254 nm (UV-254) removals. This confirms that UV-254 could be used as a tertiary treatment performance indicator to monitor the process. This parameter allowed identifying that the removals of UV-254 and DOC reach a plateau from a μGAC retention time (SRT) of 90-100 days. The μGAC configuration substantially improves the overall quality of the WWTP discharges by reducing biological (38-45%) and chemical oxygen demands (21-48%), DOC (13-44%) and UV-254 (22-48%). In addition, total suspended solids (TSS) are retained by the μGAC bed and a biological activity (nitratation) leads to a total elimination of NO2(-). For micropollutants, PPHs have a good affinity for μGAC and high (>60%) or very high (>80%) removals are observed for most of the quantified compounds (n=22/32), i.e. atenolol (92-97%), carbamazepine (80-94%), ciprofloxacin (75-95%), diclofenac (71-97%), oxazepam (74-91%) or sulfamethoxazole (56-83%). In addition, alkylphenols, artificial sweeteners, benzotriazole, bisphenol A, personal care products (triclocarban and parabens) and pesticides have removals lying in the 50 ->90% range. Overall, the fluidized bed of μGAC allows obtaining performances comparable to PAC at the same activated carbon dose. Indeed, the average removal of the 13 PPHs found at a high occurrence (>75%) in WWTP discharges is similar at 20 g/m(3) of μGAC (78-89%) and PAC (85-93%). In addition, this recycled μGAC operation leads to several operational advantages (no FeCl3, reactivable, higher SRT, higher treated flow) and has a stronger impact on the overall wastewater quality compared to PAC.


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2015

Partitioning of the pesticide trifluralin between dissolved organic matter and water using automated SPME-GC/MS

Emilie Caupos; Arnaud Touffet; Patrick Mazellier; Jean-Philippe Croué

Solid-phase microextraction (SPME) was used to determine the equilibrium association constant for a pesticide, trifluralin (TFR), with dissolved organic matter (DOM). After optimization of the SPME method for the analysis of TFR, partition coefficients (KDOM) with three different sources of DOM were determined in buffered solutions at pH 7. Commercial humic acids and DOM fractions isolated from two surface waters were used. The values of log KDOM varied from 4.3 to 5.8, depending on the nature of the organic material. A good correlation was established between log KDOM and DOM properties (as measured with the H/O atomic ratio and UV absorbance), in agreement with literature data. This is consistent with the effect of polarity and aromaticity for governing DOM-pollutant associations, regardless of the origin of DOM. This association phenomenon is relevant to better understand the behavior of pesticides in the environment since it controls part of pesticide leaching and fate in aquatic systems.


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2018

Contamination of soils by metals and organic micropollutants: case study of the Parisian conurbation

Johnny Gasperi; Sophie Ayrault; Elodie Moreau-Guigon; Fabrice Alliot; Pierre Labadie; Hélène Budzinski; Martine Blanchard; Bogdan Muresan; Emilie Caupos; Mathieu Cladière; David Gateuille; Bruno Tassin; Louise Bordier; Marie-Jeanne Teil; Catherine Bourges; Annie Desportes; Marc Chevreuil; Régis Moilleron

Soils are playing a central role in the transfer and accumulation of anthropogenic pollutants in urbanized regions. Hence, this study aimed at examining the contamination levels of selected soils collected within and around the Paris conurbation (France). This also evaluated factors controlling contamination. Twenty-three trace and major elements as well as 82 organic micropollutants including polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), phthalates (PAEs), polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), alkylphenols (APs), and perfluoroalkylated substances (PFASs) were analyzed. Results reinforced the concern raised by the occurrence and levels of metals such as Zn, Pb, Cu, and Hg, identified as metallic markers of anthropogenic activities, but also pointed out the ubiquitous contamination of soils by organic micropollutants in the 0.2–55,000-μg/kg dw range. For well-documented compounds like PAHs, PCBs, and to a lesser extent PBDEs, contents were in the range of background levels worldwide. The pollutant stock in tested soil was compared to the annual atmospheric input. For PAHs; Pb; and to a lesser extent Zn, Cu, Cd, Hg, Sb, PAEs, and APs, a significant stock was observed, far more important than the recent annual atmospheric fluxes. This resulted from both (i) the persistence of a fraction of pollutants in surface soils and (ii) the cumulative atmospheric inputs over several decades. Regarding PBDEs and PFASs, stronger atmospheric input contributions were observed, thereby highlighting their recent dispersal into the environment.


Revue des sciences de l'eau | 2015

Élimination des parabènes et du triclosan dans un filtre non drainé de l'assainissement non collectif (ANC)@@@Elimination of Parabens and Triclosan in a Non Drained Filter of On-Site Sewage Treatment

Martin Seidl; Emilie Caupos; Behzad Nasri; Christophe Saillé; Olivier Fouché

On-site waste water treatment (ANC) is a device ensuring the collection, the treatment and the evacuation of domestic waste waters in an autonomous way, near the dwelling where collective infrastructure would be too expensive. The research carried out within the framework of the project Gessol Ancres considers the efficiency of such a system and in particular of its non drained sand filter in the elimination of carbon, nitrogen and of the emerging micropolluants parabens and triclosan. A new ANC device was equipped with a sampling system and was monitored during 18 months. The first results indicate a reduction of more than 80% of the carbonaceous pollution entering, with a considerable contribution from the ground. With regard to parabens and triclosan, in the first case we observed an elimination of 87% between the septic tank and the outlet of the sand filter. The ground does not contribute significantly to the elimination of parabens. The overall abatement of triclosan was 72% with a major contribution (47%) in the soil. The differences between the two substances are probably due to their molecular structure.


Water Research | 2015

Study of a large scale powdered activated carbon pilot: Removals of a wide range of emerging and priority micropollutants from wastewater treatment plant effluents

R. Mailler; Johnny Gasperi; Yves Coquet; Steven Deshayes; Sifax Zedek; Cécile Cren-Olivé; Nathalie Cartiser; Véronique Eudes; Adèle Bressy; Emilie Caupos; Régis Moilleron; Ghassan Chebbo; Vincent Rocher


Techniques Sciences Méthodes | 2017

Contamination des eaux pluviales par les micropolluants: avancées du projet INOGEV

Johnny Gasperi; Christel Sebastian; Véronique Ruban; Mélissa Delamain; Stéphane Percot; Laure Wiest; Cécile Mirande; Emilie Caupos; Dominique Demare; M. Diallo Kessoo; M. Saad; Jj Schwartz; P. Dubois; Cédric Fratta; Hélène Wolff; Régis Moilleron; Ghassan Chebbo; Cécile Cren; Maurice Millet; Sylvie Barraud; Marie-Christine Gromaire


14th IWA/IAHR International Conference on Urban Drainage (ICUD) | 2017

Quantification of twelve families of emerging pollutants in road and car park runoff

Steven Deshayes; Johnny Gasperi; Emilie Caupos; Pierre Labadie; Hélène Budzinski; Sophie Ayrault; Pascale Neveu; Paupardin Julien; Flanagan Kelsey; Lucie Varnede; Marie-Christine Gromaire


Techniques Sciences Méthodes | 2016

Élimination des polluants émergents dans les rejets de STEP - 1. Étude du procédé CarboPlus à l’échelle du prototype

V. Rocher; R. Mailler; Johnny Gasperi; Y. Coquet; F. Nauleau; O. Rousselot; S. Azimi; Steven Deshayes; Sifax Zedek; V. Eudes; Adèle Bressy; Emilie Caupos; Régis Moilleron; Ghassan Chebbo

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Hélène Wolff

University of Strasbourg

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Maurice Millet

University of Strasbourg

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Sylvie Barraud

Institut national des sciences Appliquées de Lyon

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