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Research article2009Peer reviewed

Simulation of Pharmaceutical and Personal Care Product Transport to Tile Drains after Biosolids Application

Larsbo, Mats; Lapen, David R.; Topp, Ed; Metcalfe, Chris; Abbaspour, Karim C.; Fenner, Kathrin

Abstract

pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCPs) carried in biosolids may reach surface waters or ground water when these materials are applied as fertilizer to agricultural land. During preferential flow conditions created by land application of liquid Municipal biosolids (LMB), the residence time Of Solutes in the macropores may be too short for sorption equilibration. The physically based dual-permeability model MACRO is used in environmental risk assessments for pesticides and may have potential as an environmental risk assessment tool for PPCPs. The objective of this study was to evaluate MACRO and an updated version of MACRO that included non-equilibrium sorption in macropores using data from experiments conducted in eastern Ontario, Canada on the transport of three PPCPs (atenolol, carbamazepine, and triclosan), the nicotine metabolite cotinine, and the strongly sorbing dye rhodamine WT applied in LMB. Results showed that the MACRO model could not reproduce the measured rhodamine WT concentrations (Nash-Sutcliffe coefficient [NS] for the best simulation = -0.057) in drain discharge. The updated version resulted in better fits to measured data for PPCP (average NS = 0.97) and rhodamine WT (NS = 0.84) concentrations. However, it was not possible to simulate all compounds using the same set of hydraulic parameters, which indicates that the model does not fully account for all relevant processes. The results presented herein show that non-equilibrium sorption in macropores has a large impact on simulated solute transport for reactive compounds contained in LMB. This process should be considered in solute transport models that are used for environmental risk assessments for such compounds.

Published in

Journal of Environmental Quality
2009, Volume: 38, number: 3, pages: 1274-1285
Publisher: AMER SOC AGRONOMY

      SLU Authors

    • Larsbo, Mats

      • Department of Soil Sciences, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

    Sustainable Development Goals

    Ensure availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation for all

    UKÄ Subject classification

    Fish and Aquacultural Science
    Environmental Sciences related to Agriculture and Land-use
    Agricultural Science

    Publication identifier

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.2134/jeq2008.0301

    Permanent link to this page (URI)

    https://res.slu.se/id/publ/49962