Integrated fate assessment of aromatic amines in aerobic sewage treatment plants.

Environ Monit Assess

College of Biotechnology and Pharmaceutical Engineering, Nanjing Tech University, Nanjing, China.

Published: April 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on the biodegradability and removal of seven aromatic amines in sewage treatment plants, assessing their fate for environmental safety.
  • Three testing tiers were used: a standard biodegradability test, a sewage treatment simulation, and model predictions, revealing varied degradation rates among the amines.
  • The findings indicate that while some amines degrade quickly, others persist and may pose risks to aquatic ecosystems, leading to the development of a new model for sewage treatment in China to better predict chemical behavior.

Article Abstract

The fate and exposure of chemicals in sewage treatment plants (STPs) are major considerations in risk assessment and environmental regulation. The biodegradability and removal of seven aromatic amines were systematically evaluated using a three-tiered integrated method: a standard ready biodegradability test, an aerobic sewage treatment simulation method, and model prediction. In tier 1, the seven aromatic amines were not readily biodegraded after 28 days. In adapted aerobic active sludge, 4-isopropyl aniline, 2,4-diaminotoluene, and 4-nitroaniline among them exhibited the degradation half-life time less than 20 h, the other four aromatic amines exhibited persistent with degradation half-life of > 60 h. In tier 2 of the aerobic sewage treatment simulation testing, 2,4-diaminotoluene, 4-nitroaniline, and 4-isopropylaniline demonstrated moderately to high overall removal. Hydraulic retention time (HRT) affects the removal with the optimum HRT was determined to be 12 h to 24. 2,6-Dimethyl aniline, 2-chloro-4-nitroaniline, 2,6-diethylaniline, and 3,4-dichloroaniline were not removed during the test, indicting these four aromatic amines will enter surface water and hence pose a potential risk to aquatic ecology. Considering the lack of an STP model in China for regulation purposes, in tier 3, we developed a Chinese STP (aerobic) (abbreviated as C-STP(O)) model that reflects a universal scenario for China to predict the fate. The predicted degradation, volatilization, and absorption showed a close relationship to the physicochemical properties of the chemicals, and had same tendency with tier 2 simulation test. The prediction showed that biodegradation rather than absorption or volatilization was the main removal process of aromatic amines in aerobic STP. With the combination of modified kinetics test with C-STP (O) model, the chemical fate can be more accurately predicted than using only the readily biodegradation result.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7148277PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10661-020-8111-yDOI Listing

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