4.8 Article

Spherulitic Lead Calcium Apatite Minerals in Lead Water Pipes Exposed to Phosphate-Dosed Tap Water

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 57, Issue 12, Pages 4796-4805

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.2c04538

Keywords

lead pipe; plumbosolvency; spherulite; apatite; tap water; phosphate; mineral; crystallization

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Phosphate dosing is the main strategy used to reduce lead concentration in tap water supplied by lead pipes in the UK. This study investigated the microstructure of a lead pipe supplied with high-alkalinity tap water and found that lead calcium apatite crystals played a significant role. The presence of dissolved organic molecules may inhibit the formation of lead calcium apatite and reduce the effectiveness of phosphate dosing in lead water pipes.
Phosphate dosing is the principle strategy used in the United Kingdom to reduce the concentration of lead in tap waters supplied by lead water pipes. The mechanisms of phosphate-mediated lead control are not fully understood, but solid solutions of lead calcium apatite are thought to play an important role. This study investigated the microstructure of a lead pipe, supplied with high-alkalinity tap water, in which the lead calcium apatite crystals were spherulitic having rounded and dumb-bell-shaped morphologies. XRD, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, optical microscopy, Raman spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and energy-dispersive spectroscopy showed that the lead pipe had a well-established inner layer of litharge; a middle layer containing lead calcium apatite spherulites, plumbonacrite, and some hydrocerussite; and an outer layer containing iron, lead, phosphorus, calcium, silicon, and aluminum. It was found that spherulitic lead calcium apatite could be grown in the laboratory by adding hydrocerussite to synthetic soft and hard water-containing phosphate, chloride, and citrate ions at pH 5.5 but not when the citrate was absent. This suggests that dissolved organic molecules might play a role in spherulite formation on lead water pipes. These molecules might inhibit the formation of lead calcium apatite, reducing the effectiveness of phosphate dosing in lead water pipes.

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