Science Inventory

FATE OF PESTICIDES AND TOXIC CHEMICALS DURING DRINKING WATER TREATMENT

Impact/Purpose:

Conditions for treatment of DW vary widely. However, most all processes involve some form of conventional treatment (filtration, etc.), and some form of disinfection. Also, systems sometimes use various other treatments, including softening by the addition of a base. Treatment processes can have profound effects on the pesticides and toxics that occur in DW sources. For example, hydrophobic chemicals may be partially removed by conventional treatment, however, percent removal can vary significantly depending on conditions. On the other hand, conventional treatment generally has little or no effect on hydrophilic chemicals.

If pollutants are not removed by conventional treatment, they may be altered by other treatment processes. For example, disinfection can transform some chemicals via oxidation; however, little is known about the identity of products formed by this process. Limited information shows that disinfection can yield products that are more toxic than the parent. Also, some chemicals are transformed via base-catalyzed hydrolysis during the softening process. The nature and extent of transformations vary greatly depending on treatment conditions.

EPA Program Offices recognize that treatment often has a large effect on pesticides and toxics that occur in DW sources; and they have articulated a need to incorporate these effects into risk assessments. This task will provide regulators with methods, tools, and databases to forecast the fate of pesticides and toxics during DW treatment. The early task outputs will be chemical-specific information from bench-scale studies that simulate disinfection and softening. However, all task efforts will be focused on the long-range goal of providing predictive models for chemical removal and transformation that cross chemical class and treatment conditions. Early experiments will provide information to elucidate transformation mechanisms. Next, we will investigate effects of varying treatment conditions and chemical speciation. This strategy will lead to broadly applicable tools for forecasting fate for a wide range of chemicals. Finally, we envision that the output of our predictive fate tools will be used as input into models developed under the ORD Computational Toxicology Initiative. In this fashion, the final contaminants and concentrations predicted by our models to occur in finished DW can then be considered for toxic potential. This will provide Program Offices with an integrated system for risk assessment and management for the pesticides and toxics in drinking water.

Description:

Regulations require that all relevant routes of human consumption be considered in risk assessments for anthropogenic chemicals. A large percentage of the U.S. population consumes drinking water (DW) that is treated. Limited studies show that some pesticides and toxics occurring in DW sources are partially removed by water treatment processes, and some are transformed (sometimes to more-toxic species) by reactions that occur during treatment. The goals of this task are to: 1) provide information on the effects of water treatment for high-priority pollutants, 2) provide physicochemical parameters for transformation products, and 3) provide generalized models for forecasting treatment effects.

Record Details:

Record Type:PROJECT
Start Date:04/01/2003
Projected Completion Date:12/01/2007
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 56129