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Fate of conjugated natural and synthetic steroid estrogens in crude sewage and activated sludge batch studies

Gomes, Rachel L.; Scrimshaw, Mark D.; Lester, John N.

Authors

RACHEL GOMES rachel.gomes@nottingham.ac.uk
Professor of Water & Resource Processing

Mark D. Scrimshaw

John N. Lester



Abstract

Steroids are excreted from the human body in the conjugated form but are present in sewage influent and effluent as the free steroid, the major source of estrogenic activity observed in water courses. The fate of sulfate and glucuronide conjugated steroid estrogens was investigated in batch studies using activated sludge grown on synthetic sewage in a laboratory-scale Husmann simulation and crude sewage from the field. A clear distinction between the fate of sulfate and glucuronide conjugates was observed in both matrices, with sulfated conjugates proving more recalcitrant and glucuronide deconjugation preferential in crude sewage. For each conjugate, the free steroid was observed in the biotic samples. The degree of free steroid formation was dependent on the conjugate moiety, favoring the glucuronide. Subsequent degradation of the free steroid (and sorption to the activated sludge solid phase) was evaluated. Deconjugation followed the first order reaction rate with rate constants for 17α-ethinylestradiol 3-glucuronide, estriol 16α-glucuronide, and estrone 3-glucuronide determined as 0.32, 0.24, and 0.35 h respectively. The activated sludge solid retention time over the range of 3−9 days had 74 to 94% of sulfate conjugates remaining after 8 h. In contrast, a correlation between increasing temperature and decreasing 17α-ethinylestradiol 3-glucuronide concentrations in the activated sludge observed no conjugate present in the AS following 8 h at 22 °C Based on these batch studies and literature excretion profiles, a hypothesis is presented on which steroids and what form (glucuronide, sulfate, or free) will likely enter the sewage treatment plant.

Citation

Gomes, R. L., Scrimshaw, M. D., & Lester, J. N. (2009). Fate of conjugated natural and synthetic steroid estrogens in crude sewage and activated sludge batch studies. Environmental Science and Technology, 43(10), 3612–3618. https://doi.org/10.1021/es801952h

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Dec 1, 2008
Online Publication Date Apr 23, 2009
Publication Date May 15, 2009
Deposit Date Oct 9, 2023
Journal Environmental Science and Technology
Print ISSN 0013-936X
Electronic ISSN 1520-5851
Publisher American Chemical Society
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 43
Issue 10
Pages 3612–3618
DOI https://doi.org/10.1021/es801952h
Keywords Anions, Conjugate acid-base pairs, Degradation, Sewage, Steroids
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/23568453
Publisher URL https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/es801952h