Strategies
to Characterize Polar Organic Contamination
in Wastewater: Exploring the Capability of High Resolution Mass Spectrometry
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Abstract
Wastewater
effluents contain a multitude of organic contaminants
and transformation products, which cannot be captured by target analysis
alone. High accuracy, high resolution mass spectrometric data were
explored with novel untargeted data processing approaches (enviMass,
nontarget, and RMassBank) to complement an extensive target analysis
in initial “all in one” measurements. On average 1.2%
of the detected peaks from 10 Swiss wastewater treatment plant samples
were assigned to target compounds, with 376 reference standards available.
Corrosion inhibitors, artificial sweeteners, and pharmaceuticals exhibited
the highest concentrations. After blank and noise subtraction, 70%
of the peaks remained and were grouped into components; 20% of these
components had adduct and/or isotope information available. An intensity-based
prioritization revealed that only 4 targets were among the top 30
most intense peaks (negative mode), while 15 of these peaks contained
sulfur. Of the 26 nontarget peaks, 7 were tentatively identified via
suspect screening for sulfur-containing surfactants and one peak was
identified and confirmed as 1,3-benzothiazole-2-sulfonate, an oxidation
product of a vulcanization accelerator. High accuracy, high resolution
data combined with tailor-made nontarget processing methods (all available
online) provided vital information for the identification of a wider
range of heteroatom-containing compounds in the environment