Nanosystems Engineering Research Center for Nanotechnology-Enabled Water Treatment, School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, 85287-3005, USA; Jacobs Engineering Group, Drinking Water and Reuse, Englewood, CO, 80112, USA.
Nanosystems Engineering Research Center for Nanotechnology-Enabled Water Treatment, School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, 85287-3005, USA.
Chemosphere. 2022 Oct;305:135458. doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2022.135458. Epub 2022 Jun 23.
Lithium (Li) is listed in the fifth Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule (UCMR 5) because insufficient exposure data exists for lithium in drinking water. To help fill this data gap, lithium occurrence in source waters across the United States was assessed in 21 drinking water utilities. From the 369 samples collected from drinking water treatment plants (DWTPs), lithium ranged from 0.9 to 161 μg/L (median = 13.9 μg/L) in groundwater, and from <0.5 to 130 μg/L (median = 3.9 μg/L) in surface water. Lithium in 56% of the groundwater and 13% of the surface water samples were above non-regulatory Health-Based Screening Level (HBSL) of 10 μg/L. Sodium and lithium concentrations were strongly correlated: Kendall's τ > 0.6 (p < 0.001). As sodium is regularly monitored, this result shows that sodium can serve as an indicator to identify water sources at higher risk for elevated lithium. Lithium concentrations in the paired samples collected in source water and treated drinking water were almost identical showing lithium was not removed by conventional drinking water treatment processes. Additional sampling in wastewater effluents detected lithium at 0.8-98.2 μg/L (median = 9.9 μg/L), which suggests more research on impacts of lithium in direct and indirect potable reuse may be warranted, as the median was close to the HBSL. For comparison with the study samples collected from DWTPs, lithium concentrations from the national water quality portal (WQP) database were also investigated. Over 35,000 measurements were collected from waters that could potentially be used as drinking water sources (Cl < 250 mg/L). Data from WQP had comparable median lithium concentrations: 18 and 20 μg/L for surface water and groundwater, respectively. Overall, this study provides a comprehensive occurrence potential for lithium in US drinking water sources and can inform the data collection effort in UCMR 5.
锂(Li)被列入第五个非监管污染物监测法规(UCMR 5),因为饮用水中锂的暴露数据不足。为了帮助填补这一数据空白,评估了美国 21 家饮用水处理厂(DWTP)水源中的锂含量。从 369 个从饮用水处理厂采集的样本中,地下水的锂含量范围为 0.9 至 161μg/L(中位数= 13.9μg/L),地表水的锂含量范围为 <0.5 至 130μg/L(中位数= 3.9μg/L)。在 56%的地下水和 13%的地表水样本中,锂含量超过非监管基于健康的筛选水平(HBSL)10μg/L。钠离子和锂浓度呈强相关性:肯德尔τ>0.6(p<0.001)。由于经常监测钠离子,这一结果表明,钠离子可以作为一种指标,用于识别高浓度锂水源。在源水和处理饮用水中采集的配对样本中,锂浓度几乎相同,表明常规饮用水处理工艺无法去除锂。在废水排放物中的进一步采样检测到 0.8-98.2μg/L(中位数=9.9μg/L)的锂,这表明可能需要对锂在直接和间接饮用水再利用中的影响进行更多研究,因为中位数接近 HBSL。为了与从 DWTP 采集的研究样本进行比较,还研究了国家水质门户(WQP)数据库中的锂浓度。从可能用作饮用水源的水中采集了超过 35000 个测量值(Cl<250mg/L)。WQP 数据的锂浓度中位数相当:地表水和地下水分别为 18μg/L 和 20μg/L。总的来说,本研究提供了美国饮用水源中锂的综合出现潜力,并为 UCMR 5 的数据收集工作提供了信息。