4.8 Article

Removal of antibiotics in conventional and advanced wastewater treatment: Implications for environmental discharge and wastewater recycling

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 41, Issue 18, Pages 4164-4176

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2007.04.005

Keywords

activated sludge; antibiotics; environment; microfiltration; reverse osmosis; water; reuse; recycling; WWTP

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Removal of 28 human and veterinary antibiotics was assessed in a conventional (activated sludge) and advanced (microfiltration/reverse osmosis) wastewater treatment plant (VJVvrTP) in Brisbane, Australia. The dominant antibiotics detected in wastewater influents were cephalexin (med. 4.6 gL(,)(-1) freq. 100%), ciprofloxacin (med. 3.8 mu gL(-1) freq. 100%), cefaclor (med. 0.5 mu gL(-1), freq. 100%), sulphamethoxazole (med. 0.36 mu gL(-1), freq. 100%) and trimethoprim (med. 0.34 mu gL(-1), freq. 100%). Results indicated that both treatment plants significantly reduced antibiotic concentrations with an average removal rate from the liquid phase of 92%. However, antibiotics were still detected in both effluents from the low-to-mid ngL(-1) range. Antibiotics detected in effluent from the activated sludge WWTP included ciprofloxacin (med. 0.6 mu gL(-1), freq. 100%), sulphamethoxazole (med. 0.27 mu gL(-1), freq. 100%) lincomycin (med. 0.05 mu gL(-1), freq. 100%) and trimethoprim (med. 0.05 mu gL(-1), freq. 100%). Antibiotics identified in microfiltration/reverse osmosis product water included naladixic acid (med. 0.045 mu gL(-1), freq. 100%), enrofloxacin (med. 0.01 mu gL(-1), freq. 100%), roxithromycin (med. 0.01 mu gL(-1), freq. 100%), norfloxacin (med. 0.005 mu gL(-1), freq. 100%), oleandomycin (med. 0.005 mu g L-1, freq. 100%), trimethoprim (med. 0.005 mu g L-1, freq. 100%), tylosin (med. 0.001 mu gL(-1), freq. 100%), and lincomycin (med. 0.001 mu gL(-1), freq. 66%). Certain traditional parameters, including nitrate concentration, conductivity and turbidity of the effluent were assessed as predictors of total antibiotic concentration, however only conductivity demonstrated any correlation with total antibiotic concentration (p = 0.018, r = 0.7). There is currently a lack of information concerning the effects of these chemicals to critically assess potential risks for environmental discharge and water recycling. (c) 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available