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Diversity of organic components in airborne waste discharged from sewer pipe repairs

Environmental Science Processes & Impacts 2023 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ana C. Morales, Alexander Laskin Brianna Peterson, Ana C. Morales, Ana C. Morales, Christopher P. West, Christopher P. West, Brianna Peterson, Yoorae Noh, Alexander Laskin Yoorae Noh, Alexander Laskin Andrew J. Whelton, Brianna Peterson, Alexander Laskin Yoorae Noh, Yoorae Noh, Yoorae Noh, Yoorae Noh, Andrew J. Whelton, Andrew J. Whelton, Alexander Laskin Alexander Laskin

Summary

Researchers characterised organic compounds in air-discharged waste condensate from four sewer pipe repair field sites using high-resolution liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry, identifying complex mixtures of oxidised organics, nitrogen- and sulphur-containing compounds, condensed aromatics, and semi-volatile to extremely low-volatility organic compounds comprising 75-85% of total identified species.

Air-discharged waste from commonly used trenchless technologies of sewer pipe repairs is an emerging and poorly characterized source of urban pollution. This study reports on the molecular-level characterization of the atmospherically discharged aqueous-phase waste condensate samples collected at four field sites of the sewer pipe repairs. The molecular composition of organic species in these samples was investigated using reversed-phase liquid chromatography coupled with a photodiode array detector and a high-resolution mass spectrometer equipped with interchangeable atmospheric pressure photoionization and electrospray ionization sources. The waste condensate components comprise a complex mixture of organic species that can partition between gas-, aqueous-, and solid-phases when water evaporates from the air-discharged waste. Identified organic species have broad variability in molecular weight, molecular structures, and carbon oxidation state, which also varied between the waste samples. All condensates contained complex mixtures of oxidized organics, N- and S-containing organics, condensed aromatics, and their functionalized derivatives that are directly released to the atmospheric environment during installations. Furthermore, semi-volatile, low volatility, and extremely low volatility organic compounds comprise 75-85% of the total compounds identified in the waste condensates. Estimates of the component-specific viscosities suggest that upon evaporation of water waste material would form the semi-solid and solid phases. The low volatilities and high viscosities of chemical components in these waste condensates will contribute to the formation of atmospheric secondary organic aerosols and atmospheric solid nanoplastic particles. Lastly, selected components expected in the condensates were quantified and found to be present at high concentrations (1-20 mg L<sup>-1</sup>) that may exceed regulatory limits.

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