Office of Research and Development, Drinking Water Management Branch, Center for Environmental Solutions & Emergency Response, Water Infrastructure Division, U.S. Environmental Protect Agency, 26W. Martin Luther King Dr., Cincinnati, Ohio 45268, United States.
Office of Research and Development, Center for Environmental Solutions & Emergency Response, Water Infrastructure Division, Oak Ridge Associated Universities (ORAU) Student Services Contractor to the U.S. Environmental Protect Agency, Cincinnati 45268, United States.
Environ Sci Technol. 2020 Nov 3;54(21):13672-13679. doi: 10.1021/acs.est.0c03797. Epub 2020 Oct 22.
Following a pH reduction in their drinking water over a span of more than 20 years, the City of Newark, New Jersey, has struggled with elevated lead (Pb) release from Pb service lines and domestic plumbing in the zone fed by the Pequannock Water Treatment Plant. In response, Newark initiated orthophosphate addition and provided faucet-mounted point-of-use (POU) filters and pitcher filters certified for Pb and particulate reduction under NSF/ANSI Standards 53 and 42 to residential homes in that zone. Water chemistry analysis and size fractionation sampling were performed at four of these houses. Analysis of the particulate material retained by the fractionation filters revealed that Pb was dominantly present in the water as fine Pb(II) orthophosphate particles. A considerable amount of the particulates occurred as a nanoscale fraction that sometimes passed through the POU faucet or pitcher filtration units. Scanning electron microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, and energy-dispersive spectroscopy analyses showed that the nanoparticles (<100 nm) and their aggregates were composed of Pb, phosphorus, and chlorine, which are consistent with pyromorphite, Pb(PO)Cl. Electron diffraction and X-ray analyses supported the presence of hydroxypyromorphite and chloropyromorphite nanoparticles and the size range estimates from the imaging. This research confirmed that nonadherent Pb(II)-orthophosphate nanoparticles were an important form of Pb in drinking water in the Pequannock water quality zone of Newark.
新泽西州纽瓦克市的饮用水 pH 值在 20 多年的时间里逐渐降低,由此导致该市面临 Pequannock 水处理厂供水区域内铅服务管道和家庭管道中铅释放量增加的问题。为了解决这个问题,纽瓦克市开始添加正磷酸盐,并向该区域的住宅提供经过 NSF/ANSI 标准 53 和 42 认证的龙头式即时使用(POU)过滤器和水罐式过滤器,以减少铅和颗粒物。在这四所房屋中进行了水质化学分析和尺寸分级采样。对分级过滤器截留的颗粒物质进行分析后发现,铅主要以细小的 Pb(II)正磷酸盐颗粒形式存在于水中。相当一部分颗粒物质以纳米级部分存在,有时会通过 POU 龙头或水罐式过滤单元。扫描电子显微镜、透射电子显微镜和能量色散光谱分析表明,这些纳米颗粒(<100nm)及其聚集体由 Pb、磷和氯组成,与磷氯铅矿一致。电子衍射和 X 射线分析证实了羟磷氯铅矿和氯磷铅矿纳米颗粒的存在,并支持了从成像中得出的纳米颗粒大小范围的估计。这项研究证实了非附着的 Pb(II)-正磷酸盐纳米颗粒是纽瓦克市 Pequannock 水质区域饮用水中铅的一种重要存在形式。