Life cycle assessment of advanced wastewater treatment processes: Involving 126 pharmaceuticals and personal care products in life cycle inventory

Continuous exposure to pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCPs) is a critical concern given potential toxicity impacts on aquatic environments and human health, although concentrations of PPCPs in the environment are low. While several studies have focused on the fate and toxicity of organ...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of environmental management 2019-05, Vol.238, p.442-450
Hauptverfasser: Li, Yi, Zhang, Shanxue, Zhang, Wenlong, Xiong, Wei, Ye, Quanliang, Hou, Xing, Wang, Chao, Wang, Peifang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Continuous exposure to pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCPs) is a critical concern given potential toxicity impacts on aquatic environments and human health, although concentrations of PPCPs in the environment are low. While several studies have focused on the fate and toxicity of organic micropollutants in wastewater, the environmental impacts of life cycle assessment induced by these organic micropollutants in advanced wastewater treatment processes are still unknown. To address this need, an environmental evaluation of three representative advanced wastewater treatment processes (ozonation, granular activated carbon adsorption and reverse osmosis) involving PPCPs removal was conducted using life cycle assessment and USEtox model in this study. Although a large amount of PPCPs can be eliminated during conventional waste highest characterization factors for freshwater toxicity, while 17α-ethinylestradiol, sertraline, and 17β-estradiol had the highest human toxicity characterization factors. From the perspective of LCA, reverse osmosis appeared to have the greatest environmental burden due to the high energy and material consumption during the treatment process. After involving 126 PPCPs in life cycle inventory, the ecotoxicity impact results were increased significantly in three advanced wastewater treatment processes. The contribution of effluent was improved in toxicity impact category, accounting more than 25% for the three processes. The effluent (including PPCPs) as the key factor was next only to electricity and chemicals in eutrophication, ecotoxicity and human toxicity impacts category particularly. Therefore, PPCPs should not be ignored in life cycle assessment of advanced wastewater treatment processes, although they are not typically monitored in wastewater. These results are valuable for conducting a comprehensive environmental evaluation of advanced wastewater treatment processes considering micro-pollutants removal. The identified PPCPs with high freshwater and human toxicity can be considered as the priority control index of organic micropollutants for wastewater treatment plants. [Display omitted] •New characterization factors of 60 PPCPs were estimated.•The impact scores of 126 PPCPs were incorporated into the life cycle assessment.•126 PPCPs were involved in life cycle inventory.•PPCPs contribute higher freshwater toxicity impacts than human toxicity impacts.•The 126 PPCPs account for 2.6% of total ecotoxicological results.
ISSN:0301-4797
1095-8630
DOI:10.1016/j.jenvman.2019.01.118