Lanthanides release and partitioning in municipal wastewater effluents

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics10050254

Language of the publication
English
Date
2022-05-17
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Turcotte, Patrice
  • Smyth, Shirley Anne
  • Gagné, François
  • Gagnon, Christian
Publisher
MDPI

Abstract

The use of lanthanides is increasing in our society, whether in communication technologies, transportation, electronics or medical imaging. Some lanthanides enter urban wastewater and flow through municipal wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). However, little is known about the effectiveness of treatment processes to remove these elements and the concentrations released in effluents to receiving waters. The main objective of this study was to investigate the fate of lanthanides in various wastewater treatment processes. A secondary objective was to better understand the fate of medical gadolinium (Gd) complexes; anthropogenic inputs were differentiated from geological sources using an approach based on concentration normalization with respect to chondrite Post-Archean Australian Shale (PAAS). The hypothesis was that most lanthanides, especially of geological origin, are associated with the particulate phase and could be efficiently removed by WWTPs. To monitor these elements in different WWTPs, various urban influents and effluents from simple aerated lagoons to advanced treatments were sampled in Canada. The results showed that the rates of lanthanide removal by treatment processes decrease with their atomic number; from 95% for cerium (Ce) to 70% for lutetium (Lu), except for Gd, which was minimally removed. The normalization approach permitted the determination of the origin of Gd in these wastewaters, i.e., medical application versus the geological background. By distinguishing the geogenic Gd fraction from the anthropogenic one, the removal efficiency was evaluated according to the origin of the Gd; nearly 90% for geogenic Gd and a rate varying from 15% to 50% in the case of anthropogenic Gd. The processes using alum as the flocculating agent had the highest removal efficiency from wastewater.

Subject

  • Nature and environment,
  • Water,
  • Science and technology

Rights

Pagination

13 pages

Peer review

Yes

Open access level

Gold

Identifiers

ISSN
2305-6304

Article

Journal title
Toxics
Journal volume
10
Journal issue
5
Accepted date
2022-05-15
Submitted date
2022-04-19

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URI

Collection(s)

Water

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