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Article
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AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button.
Tier 2
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Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence.
Environmental Sources
Human Health Effects
Policy & Risk
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Urban stormwater capture for water supply: look out for persistent, mobile and toxic substances
Environmental Science Water Research & Technology
2023
25 citations
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Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Score: 45
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0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Lena Mutzner,
Stephanie Spahr,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Kefeng Zhang,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Stephanie Spahr,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Richard G. Luthy,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Richard G. Luthy,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Stephanie Spahr,
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Hans Peter H. Arp
Summary
Urban stormwater harvested for water supply was found to contain persistent, mobile, and toxic substances, raising concerns about water quality risks from this increasingly used alternative water source. The study calls for better characterization of stormwater contaminant profiles before use.
Urban stormwater is a source of persistent, mobile and toxic substances, however the risk for water resources is unknown.
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