Combined sewer overflows: An environmental source of hormones and wastewater micropollutants

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Abstract

90%) wastewater treatment removal efficiency. By contrast, compounds with low removal efficiencies (<90%) have less than 10% of annual load contributed by CSO discharges. Concentrations of estrogens, androgens, and WMPs generally are 10 times higher in CSO discharges compared to treated wastewater discharges. Compound concentrations in samples of CSO discharges generally decrease with increasing flow because of wastewater dilution by rainfall runoff. By contrast, concentrations of hormones and many WMPs in samples from treated discharges can increase with increasing flow due to decreasing removal efficiency. © This article not subject to U.S. Copyright. Published 2012 by the American Chemical Society.

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Phillips, P. J., Chalmers, A. T., Gray, J. L., Kolpin, D. W., Foreman, W. T., & Wall, G. R. (2012). Combined sewer overflows: An environmental source of hormones and wastewater micropollutants. Environmental Science and Technology, 46(10), 5336–5343. https://doi.org/10.1021/es3001294

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