Evaluation of aquatic plants for removing polar microcontaminants: A microcosm experiment
[Display omitted] ► Effect of aquatic plants on the removal capacity of emerging contaminants was studied. ► Microcosm study revealed that plants aid to the removal of these contaminants. ► Removal efficiencies ranged from no detectable removal to more than 99 %. ► Biodegradation, plant uptake and p...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Chemosphere (Oxford) 2012-08, Vol.88 (10), p.1257-1264 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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► Effect of aquatic plants on the removal capacity of emerging contaminants was studied. ► Microcosm study revealed that plants aid to the removal of these contaminants. ► Removal efficiencies ranged from no detectable removal to more than 99 %. ► Biodegradation, plant uptake and photodegradation are the most important removal pathways. ► The concentration decline was fit to a pseudo-first order kinetic.
Microcosm wetland systems (5 L containers) planted with Salvinia molesta, Lemna minor, Ceratophyllum demersum, and Elodea canadensis were investigated for the removal of diclofenac, triclosan, naproxen, ibuprofen, caffeine, clofibric acid and MCPA. After 38days of incubation, 40–99% of triclosan, diclofenac, and naproxen were removed from the planted and unplanted reactors. In covered control reactors no removal was observed. Caffeine and ibuprofen were removed from 40% to 80% in planted reactors whereas removals in control reactors were much lower (2–30%). Removal of clofibric acid and MCPA were negligible in both planted and unplanted reactors. The findings suggested that triclosan, diclofenac, and naproxen were removed predominantly by photodegradation, whereas caffeine and naproxen were removed by biodegradation and/or plant uptake. Pseudo-first-order removal rate constants estimated from nonlinear regressions of time series concentration data were used to describe the contaminant removals. Removal rate constants ranged from 0.003 to 0.299d−1, with half-lives from 2 to 248days. The formation of two major degradation products from ibuprofen, carboxy-ibuprofen and hydroxy-ibuprofen, and a photodegradation product from diclofenac, 1-(8-Chlorocarbazolyl)acetic acid, were followed as a function of time. This study emphasizes that plants contribute to the elimination capacity of microcontaminants in wetlands systems through biodegradation and uptake processes. |
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ISSN: | 0045-6535 1879-1298 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2012.04.004 |