Science Inventory

CHALLENGES IN BIODEGRADATION OF TRACE ORGANIC CONTAMINANTS-GASOLINE OXYGENATES AND SEX HORMONES

Citation:

SUIDAN, M. T., M. ESPERANZA, M. ZEIN, P. T. MCCAULEY, R. C. BRENNER, AND A. D. VENOSA. CHALLENGES IN BIODEGRADATION OF TRACE ORGANIC CONTAMINANTS-GASOLINE OXYGENATES AND SEX HORMONES. DOI: 10.2175/1061430, M. K. Stenstrom (ed.), WATER ENVIRONMENT RESEARCH. Water Environment Federation, Alexandria, VA, 77(1):4-11, (2005).

Impact/Purpose:

Gasoline oxygenates and sex hormones are used to illustrate challenges associated with the biodegradation of trace organic contaminants.

Description:

Advances in analytical methods have led to the identification of several classes of organic chemicals that are associated with adverse environmental impacts. Two such classes of organic chemicals, gasoline oxygenates and sex hormones, are used to illustrate challenges associated with the biodegradation of trace organic contaminants. Gasoline oxygenates can be present in groundwater, alone or commingled with xylene, at appreciable concentrations. However, target-treated water standards dictate that gasoline oxygenates be reduced to the microgram-per-liter concentration range before consumption. Sex hormones, on the other hand, are present in wastewater matrixes in the part-per-trillion concentration range, and the biggest challenge that must be met, before optimizing their removal, is facilitating their detection.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:01/01/2005
Record Last Revised:06/02/2008
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 116984