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Monitoring human exposure to chemicals posing public health threats is critically important for risk management and for informing regulatory actions. Chemical threats result from both environmental pollutants and elected substance use (e.g., consumption of drugs, alcohol and tobacco). Measuring chemical occurrence and concentrations in environmental matrices can help to pinpoint

Monitoring human exposure to chemicals posing public health threats is critically important for risk management and for informing regulatory actions. Chemical threats result from both environmental pollutants and elected substance use (e.g., consumption of drugs, alcohol and tobacco). Measuring chemical occurrence and concentrations in environmental matrices can help to pinpoint human exposure routes. For instance, indoor dust, a sink of indoor environmental contaminants, can serve to assess indoor air contamination and associated human exposures. Urban wastewater arriving at treatment plants contains urine and stool from the general population, the analysis of which can provide information on chemical threats in the community and ongoing harmful exposures. Analysis of sewage sludge can serve to reveal the identity and quantity of persistent organic pollutants in cities and inform estimates of toxic body burdens in local populations.

The objective of this dissertation was to investigate the occurrence and quantity of select, potentially harmful, anthropogenic chemicals in various environmental matrices and to explore the diagnostic value of analytical assays for informing public health decision-making. This dissertation (i) is the first to report spatio-temporal variations and estrogenic burdens of five parabens in sewage sludge from at the U.S. nationwide scale; (ii) represents the first China-wide survey to assess the occurrence and toxic emissions of parabens, triclosan, triclocarban, as well as triclocarban metabolites and transformation products contained in Chinese sewage sludge; (iii) documents the first use of a dispersive solid phase extraction method for indoor dust to measure dust-borne parabens, triclosan and triclocarban and estimating associated human exposures from dust ingestion; and (iv) is the first U.S. study to assess population-level alcohol and nicotine consumption in three U.S. communities using wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE). Obtained data on baseline levels of selected emerging contaminants in sewage sludge and indoor dust can serve to inform the future monitoring needs, risk assessment, and policy making. This work showcases the utility of WBE and urban metabolism metrology via dust and sewage sludge analysis to assess human behavior (e.g., drinking and smoking) and exposure risks more rapidly, efficiently and anonymously than traditional approaches can.
ContributorsChen, Jing (Author) / Halden, Rolf U. (Thesis advisor) / Borges, Chad R (Committee member) / Abbaszadegan, Morteza (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
The objective of this research was to predict the persistence of potential future contaminants in indirect potable reuse systems. In order to accurately estimate the fates of future contaminants in indirect potable reuse systems, results describing persistence from EPI Suite were modified to include sorption and oxidation. The target future

The objective of this research was to predict the persistence of potential future contaminants in indirect potable reuse systems. In order to accurately estimate the fates of future contaminants in indirect potable reuse systems, results describing persistence from EPI Suite were modified to include sorption and oxidation. The target future contaminants studied were the approximately 2000 pharmaceuticals currently undergoing testing by United States Food and Drug Administration (US FDA). Specific organic substances such as analgesics, antibiotics, and pesticides were used to verify the predicted half-lives by comparing with reported values in the literature. During sub-surface transport, an important component of indirect potable reuse systems, the effects of sorption and oxidation are important mechanisms. These mechanisms are not considered by the quantitative structure activity relationship (QSAR) model predictions for half-lives from EPI Suite. Modifying the predictions from EPI Suite to include the effects of sorption and oxidation greatly improved the accuracy of predictions in the sub-surface environment. During validation, the error was reduced by over 50% when the predictions were modified to include sorption and oxidation. Molecular weight (MW) is an important criteria for estimating the persistence of chemicals in the sub-surface environment. EPI Suite predicts that high MW compounds are persistent since the QSAR model assumes steric hindrances will prevent transformations. Therefore, results from EPI Suite can be very misleading for high MW compounds. Persistence was affected by the total number of halogen atoms in chemicals more than the sum of N-heterocyclic aromatics in chemicals. Most contaminants (over 90%) were non-persistent in the sub-surface environment suggesting that the target future drugs do not pose a significant risk to potable reuse systems. Another important finding is that the percentage of compounds produced from the biotechnology industry is increasing rapidly and should dominate the future production of pharmaceuticals. In turn, pharmaceuticals should become less persistent in the future. An evaluation of indirect potable reuse systems that use reverse osmosis (RO) for potential rejection of the target contaminants was performed by statistical analysis. Most target compounds (over 95%) can be removed by RO based on size rejection and other removal mechanisms.
ContributorsLim, Seung (Author) / Fox, Peter (Thesis advisor) / Abbaszadegan, Morteza (Committee member) / Halden, Rolf (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2011
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Description
Corrosion is known to have severe infrastructure integrity implications in a broad range of industries including water and wastewater treatment and reclamation. In the U.S. alone, the total losses due to corrosion in drinking water and wastewater systems can account for economic losses as high as $80 billion dollars a

Corrosion is known to have severe infrastructure integrity implications in a broad range of industries including water and wastewater treatment and reclamation. In the U.S. alone, the total losses due to corrosion in drinking water and wastewater systems can account for economic losses as high as $80 billion dollars a year. Microbially induced corrosion is a complex phenomenon which involve various phases; 1) formation of biofilms on submerged surfaces, 2) creation of micro-environmental niches associated with biofilm growth, 3) altered availability nutrients, 4) changes in the pH and oxygen concentrations. Biofilms can harbor opportunistic or pathogenic bacteria for a long time increasing the risk of pathogen exposure for the end users. The focus of this thesis research was to study the kinetics of microbially induced corrosion of various materials in water and reclaimed water systems. The specific objective was to assess the biofilms formation potential on stainless steel 304, stainless steel 316, galvanized steel, copper, cPVC, glass, carbon steel, and cast iron in water and reclaimed water systems. Experiments were conducted using bioreactor containers, each bioreactor housed four sampling boxes with eight partitions, dedicated to each material type coupon. One bioreactor was stationed at ASU, and one at Vistancia Aquifer Storage and Recovery (ASR) well; while three bioreactors were stationed at Butler facility, at pre-disinfection, post-UV and post-chlorination. From each location, one submerged sampling box was retrieved after 1, 3, 6 and 12 months. Time series of biofilm samples recovered from various types of coupons from different locations were analyzed using physical and culture-based techniques for quantification of biofilms and detection of heterotrophic plate count (HPC) bacteria, Legionella, Mycobacterium, and sulfate reducing bacteria (SRB). After one-year, galvanized steel had the highest concentration of HPC at 4.27 logs while copper had the lowest concentration of 3.08 logs of HPC. Bacterial growth data collected from the SRB tests was compiled to develop a numerical matrix using growth potential, biofilm formation potential and metal reduction potential of SRB isolates. This risk assessment matrix can be a useful tool for the water industry to evaluate the potential risk of MIC in their systems.
ContributorsNeal, Amber (Author) / Abbaszadegan, Morteza (Thesis advisor) / Fox, Peter (Committee member) / Alum, Absar (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Nitrogen removal and energy reduction in wastewater treatment are shared goals. Approaches to achieve those goals include the techniques of shortcut nitrogen removal utilizing nitrite shunt, biocatalyst, nitritation, deammonification, and simultaneous nitrification-denitrification. The practice of those techniques is newer in the industry of wastewater treatment but continues to develop, along

Nitrogen removal and energy reduction in wastewater treatment are shared goals. Approaches to achieve those goals include the techniques of shortcut nitrogen removal utilizing nitrite shunt, biocatalyst, nitritation, deammonification, and simultaneous nitrification-denitrification. The practice of those techniques is newer in the industry of wastewater treatment but continues to develop, along with the understanding of the biological and chemical activities that drive those processes. The kinetics and stoichiometry of traditional and shortcut nitrogen removal reactions are generally well understood to date. However, the thermodynamics of those processes are complex and deserve additional research to better understand the dominant factors that drive cell synthesis. Additionally, the implementation of nitrogen shortcut techniques can reduce the footprint of wastewater treatment processes that implement nitrogen removal by approximately 5 percent and can reduce operating costs by between 12 and 26 percent annually. Combined, nitrogen shortcut techniques can contribute to significant reduction in the long-term cost to operate, due to lower energy and consumable requirements, fast reaction times resulting in shorter solids retention times, and improvement efficiency in nitrogen removal from wastewater. This dissertation explores and defines the dominant factors that contribute to the success of efficiencies in traditional and shortcut nitrogen removal techniques, focusing on the natural microbiological processes. The culmination of these efforts was used to develop decision matrices to promote consideration of nitrogen shortcut techniques by practitioners during conceptual planning and design of wastewater treatment facilities.
ContributorsTack, Frederick Henry (Author) / Fox, Peter (Thesis advisor) / Krajmalnik-Brown, Rosa (Committee member) / Abbaszadegan, Morteza (Committee member) / Alum, Absar (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021