4.8 Article

Investigating Fluorescent Organic-Matter Composition as a Key Predictor for Arsenic Mobility in Groundwater Aquifers

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 52, Issue 22, Pages 13027-13036

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b04070

Keywords

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Funding

  1. CISU (civilsamfund i udvikling) [14-1461-SP-apr]
  2. organisation Joygopalpur Gram Vikash Kendra (JGVK)
  3. Danish Council for Independent Research Natural Sciences [DFF-1323-00336 363]
  4. Nordic5Tech collaborative funding (Technical University of Denmark)

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Dissolved organic matter (DOM) is linked to the heterogeneous distribution of elevated arsenic (As) in groundwater used for drinking and irrigation purposes, but the relationship between DOM characteristics and arsenic mobility has yet to be fully understood. Here, DOM from groundwater sampled in the Bengal Basin region was characterized using both conventional bulk emission-excitation (EEM) spectroscopy and high-performance size-exclusion chromatography coupled to spectroscopy (HPSEC-EEM). Notably, application of the novel HPSEC-EEM approach permitted the total fluorescence of individual samples to be independently resolved into its underlying components. This allowed the external validation of the bulk-sample fluorescence decomposition and offered insight into the molecular size distribution of fluorescent DOM. Molecular size distributions were similar for the UVA fluorescent (C-310 and C-340) as well as the three visible fluorescent (C-390, C-440, and C-500) components. There was a greater visible fluorescence in shallow aquifer samples (10-33 m) with high As (SH, up to 418 mu g/L) than in samples from the same depth with lower As (up to 40 mu g/L). This indicated a link between DOM quality and As mobility within the shallow aquifer. The deep aquifer samples (170-200 m) revealed DOM characteristics similar to SH samples but had low As concentrations (<4 mu g/L), signifying that the deep aquifer is potentially vulnerable to As contamination. These findings pave the way for a more comprehensive assessment of the susceptibility of drinking water aquifers, thereby supporting the management of groundwater resources.

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