Presence of N, N'-substituted p-phenylenediamine quinones in Tap Water: Implication for human exposure.

Environ Res

Key Laboratory of Microbial Technology for Industrial Pollution Control of Zhejiang Province, College of Environment, Zhejiang University of Technology, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, 310032, PR China. Electronic address:

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Monitoring studies show N, N'-substituted p-phenylenediamine-derived quinones (PPDQs) are widely present in the environment, with potential exposure to the general population through tap water.
  • A study in Hangzhou, China, identified seven PPDQ homologues in tap water samples, finding detection frequencies between 38-89%, predominantly 6PPDQ at a mean concentration of 0.56 ng/L.
  • Daily intake of PPDQs was notably higher in infants compared to children and adults, highlighting the importance of these findings for understanding human exposure to PPDQs in drinking water.

Article Abstract

Monitoring studies have demonstrated the wide presence of N, N'-substituted p-phenylenediamine-derived quinones (PPDQs) in environmental matrices. The general population may be potentially exposed to PPDQs through the consumption of tap water. While, the existence of PPDQs in tap water has not been well examined. To fill this gap, in this study we collected tap water samples from Hangzhou, China, and examined seven homologues of PPDQs in collected samples. All target PPDQs were identified in the collected tap water samples, with distinct detection frequencies (38-89%). PPDQs detected in tap water was dominated by N-(1, 3-dimethylbutyl)-N'-phenyl-p-phenylenediamine (6PPDQ; mean 0.56 ng/L, < LOD-4.0 ng/L). The profiles of PPDQs concentrations in tap water from the four districts of Hangzhou city were slightly different. The daily intake (DI) was found highest for 6PPDQ (mean 14-22 pg/kg bw/day, median 10-15 pg/kg bw/day) through tap water intake. The relatively higher DIs of various PPDQs were displayed for infants (mean 10-22 pg/kg bw/day, median 6.5-15 pg/kg bw/day), relative to the children (8.0-18 pg/kg bw/day, 5.4-12 pg/kg bw/day) and adults (6.7-14 pg/kg bw/day, 4.5-10 pg/kg bw/day). These data are crucial for assessing the overall human exposure to PPDQs. This study first, to our knowledge, reveals the concentrations and profiles of PPDQs in tap water.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2024.119817DOI Listing

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