Quantification of pharmaceuticals in the sealant fluids of actively used waterless urinals.

Water Environ Res

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Nevada, Reno, Nevada, USA.

Published: October 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Prior research showed that waterless urinal cartridges can remove pharmaceuticals from urine, reducing wastewater contamination.
  • A new method was developed to measure pharmaceuticals in the sealant phase, showing effective recovery rates from the sealant fluids and confirming the presence of several pharmaceuticals in samples taken from on-campus urinals.
  • The results indicated some removal of pharmaceuticals occurs, but significant improvements in wastewater concentration reductions require modifications to the sealant fluid or cartridge design.

Article Abstract

Prior measurements at bench scale revealed that waterless urinal cartridges containing oily sealant fluids are capable of partitioning pharmaceuticals from urine and therefore reducing their concentration in wastewater. We sought to measure pharmaceutical removal from in-use waterless urinals. We developed a method to quantify pharmaceuticals in the sealant phase, which resulted in 79 ± 30% and 71 ± 30% recovery of eight pharmaceuticals from two sealant fluids, respectively. The method was applied to sealant samples collected over three weeks from in-use waterless urinals on a university campus. Six of eight pharmaceuticals were present in the sealant samples from 1.4 µg/L to 241 µg/L. Loads of the six pharmaceuticals detected in the sealants were removed from the receiving wastewater from 0.02 µg/day to 3.4 µg/day across the sampling period. The concentration of the pharmaceuticals were similar over time, indicating rapid saturation and washout of the sealant. We also observed relatively rapid loss of sealant at maintenance intervals consistent with the manufacturer's instructions. These findings indicate that while waterless urinals do remove some pharmaceuticals from the wastewater stream, meaningful changes to wastewater concentrations will only result if the sealant fluid and/or the urinal cartridge are significantly modified. PRACTITIONER POINTS: We developed a quantification method for pharmaceuticals in oily waterless urinal sealants. Pharmaceuticals were present at relatively low concentrations in the sealant phase of two in-use waterless urinals. We identify engineering challenges that must be overcome to meaningfully reduce pharmaceutical loads in wastewater with waterless urinals.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8863497PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/wer.1600DOI Listing

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Quantification of pharmaceuticals in the sealant fluids of actively used waterless urinals.

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October 2021

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Nevada, Reno, Nevada, USA.

Article Synopsis
  • Prior research showed that waterless urinal cartridges can remove pharmaceuticals from urine, reducing wastewater contamination.
  • A new method was developed to measure pharmaceuticals in the sealant phase, showing effective recovery rates from the sealant fluids and confirming the presence of several pharmaceuticals in samples taken from on-campus urinals.
  • The results indicated some removal of pharmaceuticals occurs, but significant improvements in wastewater concentration reductions require modifications to the sealant fluid or cartridge design.
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