Total concentrations of heavy metals and occurrence of antibiotics in sewage sludges from cities throughout China |
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Authors: | Miaomiao Cheng Longhua Wu Yujuan Huang Yongming Luo Peter Christie |
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Institution: | 1. Key Laboratory of Soil Environment and Pollution Remediation, Institute of Soil Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing, 210008, China 2. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, 100049, People’s Republic of China
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Abstract: | Purpose A total of 58 dewatered sludge samples were collected from 58 sewage treatment plants (STPs) geographically located in 31 provincial cities of China; the concentrations of heavy metals and antibiotics were determined to monitor the pollutant levels on a large scale, and the pollutant concentrations in sludge samples from different sources of sewage sludge and different geographical regions were compared. Materials and methods All the samples were divided into two portions, one of which was air-dried for determination of heavy metals. The other portion was placed in a brown glass bottle and frozen at ?20 °C for antibiotics analysis. Total heavy metals were digested with aqua regia and determined by atomic absorption spectrophotometry (Varian SpectrAA 220FS and Varian SpectrAA 220Z). The antibiotics were extracted with EDTA-sodium phosphate buffer with acetonitrile/Mg(NO3)2-NH3?H2O, v/v, 3:1 and analysed by liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (LC-ESI-MS/MS) and quantified by the isotope-labelled internal standard method. Results and discussion In all the sludge samples, zinc was the most abundant metal followed by copper, with relatively low concentrations of chromium, lead, nickel and cadmium. Only 20 % of samples exceeded the Chinese class A values of heavy metal standards for agricultural use (GJ/T309-2009). Sixteen different antibiotics were detected in all the sludge samples, and fluoroquinolones (FQs) and tetracyclines (TCs) were more abundant than sulfonamides (SAs). Concentrations of ∑FQs, ∑TCs and ∑SAs ranged from 1,569 to 23,825 μg kg?1 (mean 8,274 μg kg?1, dry weight), from 592 to 37,895 μg kg?1 (mean 8,326 μg kg?1, dry weight) and from 20.1 to 117 μg kg?1 (mean 55.4 μg kg?1, dry weight), respectively. Tetracyclines (except chlortetracycline) were significantly correlated with zinc and lead. No significant regional trends were observed in the concentrations of heavy metals and antibiotics in sludges. Conclusions Heavy metal concentrations are not the major factor restricting domestic and mixed flow sludge application, but the antibiotic concentrations in sludges are problematic; regulation of antibiotic use and establishment of standards to ensure safe handling of sludges are needed. |
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