This collection includes both ASU Theses and Dissertations, submitted by graduate students, and the Barrett, Honors College theses submitted by undergraduate students. 

Displaying 1 - 2 of 2
Filtering by

Clear all filters

168437-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
This dissertation applies wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) to aqueous process flows to gauge the public health status concerning exposure and potential abuse of pharmaceuticals, antimicrobials, and narcotics. The masses of emerging contaminants emitted into Indian aquatic and terrestrial environments were the highest for open defecation (17 ± 12 mt/d), with non-steroidal

This dissertation applies wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) to aqueous process flows to gauge the public health status concerning exposure and potential abuse of pharmaceuticals, antimicrobials, and narcotics. The masses of emerging contaminants emitted into Indian aquatic and terrestrial environments were the highest for open defecation (17 ± 12 mt/d), with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs dominating environmental loading (14 ± 10 mt/d), followed by antibiotics, antimicrobials, phthalates and miscellaneous pharmaceuticals (Chapter 2). Fourteen wastewater treatment plants sampled across the U.S. had a combined average mass loading of 71 ± 12 µg/d/capita for the antimicrobials triclosan and triclocarban, with paraben compounds contributing 19 ± 5 µg/d/US capita. Risk models showed unfavorable hazard quotients (HQ>1) for sensitive aquatic organisms (algae, zebra fish and rainbow trout) from predicted exposures to antimicrobials of alternative use, i.e., chlorhexidine and benzalkonium chloride (Chapter 3). Substances subject to licit and illicit use, monitored by WBE in a medium-sized southwestern U.S. city before and during COVID-19-related lockdowns, showed the highest mass loads for cocaine and its major metabolite benzoylecgonine (2,207 total), methadone and its major metabolite 2-Ethylidene-1,5-dimethyl-3,3-diphenylpyrrolidine (197), parent mitragynine (60), oxycodone and its major metabolite noroxycodone (48), heroin and its major metabolite 6-acetylmorphine (45), and parent codeine (37) in mg/1,000 capita/day. Heroin use during the lockdown increased ~10-fold relative to the pre-lockdown baseline, whereas oxycodone and codeine mass loading decreased 5-fold and 2.5-fold, respectively (Chapter 4). Experiments elucidating the stability of stress hormones and their metabolites as a function of temperature and in-sewer residence time revealed a rapid degradation to completion over 24 hours at 35°C, whereas lower temperatures of 25°C and 15°C were found to allow for successful tracking of indicators of stress at the population level; statistically significant differences in stress hormone decay rates were observed due to geographic locations at 25°C (p=0.009) but not due to redox conditions in the sewer pipe (Chapter 5). This thesis demonstrated the successful application of WBE for studying population health frequently and inexpensively, with the limitation that a lack of centralized wastewater infrastructure in developing countries may create barriers for at-risk populations to access and utilize this novel technology (Chapter 6).
ContributorsKelkar, Varun Pushkaraj (Author) / Halden, Rolf U (Thesis advisor) / Hamilton, Kerry A (Committee member) / Conroy-Ben, Otakuye (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
171613-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
The topic of this dissertation is the sustainable disposal of waste materials in a way that mitigates risk to human health and the environment. A meta-analysis of organic contaminant concentrations in U.S. sewage sludge highlights the known analytes detected across 106 studies, and juxtaposes these data with a Chinese sludge

The topic of this dissertation is the sustainable disposal of waste materials in a way that mitigates risk to human health and the environment. A meta-analysis of organic contaminant concentrations in U.S. sewage sludge highlights the known analytes detected across 106 studies, and juxtaposes these data with a Chinese sludge analysis covering 159 studies, finding that U.S. average concentrations were higher than Chinese concentrations in 26 out of 34 tested organic chemicals. To further investigate the risk that sewage sludge poses when applied on agricultural land mixed with fertilizer as a soil amendment, a sewage sludge risk assessment that for the first time utilized Monte-Carlo simulations was performed to quantify the human health risk of metals present in sewage sludge applied on soils subject to involuntarily ingestion. This study found that while hazard indexes did not indicate a risk to humans for the metals studied, hundreds of other inorganic and organic chemicals are known to be present whose human health risks remain uncertain due to a lack of toxicological data. Among these contaminants are micro- and nanoplastics which contaminate not just sewage sludge but the entire globe. Application of existing models to the world’s oceans showed micro- and nanoplastics to constitute an important component of the total global plastic waste inventory, forecasting peak exposures of aquatic organisms (and by extension human populations) to occur in future years irrespective of what policy options will be implemented. A review of disposal options for sewage sludge illustrates the challenge of dealing with waste streams containing persistent or even indestructible contaminants such as perfluorinated organics, mass-produced fossil-fuel derived consumer plastics, and extensively mined toxic metals. The work presented here details the risks, both avoidable and unavoidable, that are present in the disposal of sewage sludge and plastics. The information presented in this dissertation may inform regulatory actions to promote environmentally responsible disposal and reuse of sewage sludge and highlights the need for industry to transition to the production of more sustainable plastics in order to reduce and ultimately eliminate sources of persistent long-term environmental pollution and their associated adverse human health and ecosystem impacts.
ContributorsSteele, Joshua (Author) / Halden, Rolf U (Thesis advisor) / Mascaro, Giuseppe (Committee member) / Meier, Madeline (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022