Litcius/Paper detail

Human exposure to per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances and other emerging contaminants in drinking water

Dora Cserbik, Paula E. Redondo‐Hasselerharm, María José Farré, Josep Sanchís, Arantxa Bartolomé, Alexandra Paraian, Eva María Herrera, Josep Caixach, Cristina M. Villanueva, Cintia Flores

2023npj Clean Water52 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract A wide range of chemicals was measured in different types of drinking water and urine samples through target and non-target screening (NTS) to estimate human exposure. Tap water samples collected from 42 locations in Barcelona (August–October/2020, May/2021), tap water filtered with domestic activated carbon filters (AC, N = 6) and reverse osmosis (RO, N = 5), commercial bottled water ( N = 10), and urine ( N = 39) samples were included. 35 per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), bisphenol A, and nonylphenol were analyzed using LC – MS/MS and GC – MS/MS, and NTS using LC – HRMS. 9 PFAS were detected in unfiltered tap water of first sampling (79% samples, median = 30 ng/L), 6 in the second (69%, median = 9.8 ng/L), and 5 in 13% urine samples. NTS tentatively identified pharmaceuticals and other industrial chemicals in drinking water. PFAS were removed by RO and not by AC filters. Findings provide valuable information for exposure science and water quality monitoring of emerging drinking water contaminants.

Topics & Concepts

Tap waterEnvironmental chemistryBottled waterUrineContaminationNonylphenolWater qualityReverse osmosisChemistryEnvironmental scienceUrine sampleChromatographyEnvironmental engineeringMembraneBiologyEcologyBiochemistryPer- and polyfluoroalkyl substances researchToxic Organic Pollutants ImpactEffects and risks of endocrine disrupting chemicals