Industrial producers are required by the United States’ Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to ensure their waste is safe before it’s discharged. But not every expeller sticks to these limits. Some make mistakes, and some don’t comply.
To check all wastewater is safe, the EPA and other regulators carry out tests along water systems.
This infographic visualizes the journey wastewater takes to be deemed safe.
Download this infographic to learn:
- What treatment steps are required
- Which contaminants are removed
- Which methods are used to test the water has been cleaned
WATER
ANALYSIS
Industrial producers are required by the United States’ Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) to ensure their waste is safe before it’s discharged. But not every
expeller sticks to these limits. Some make mistakes, some don’t comply.
To check all wastewater is safe, the EPA and other regulators carry out tests
along the water systems. This Technology Networks infographic explores which
tests can be used and what they can measure.
Treatment steps
STEP 1
STEP 2
STEP 3
PRIMARY TREATMENT
SECONDARY TREATMENT
Filtration of all large
Removal of
Removal of ~85% of
and settleable solids.
suspended solids
organic matter using
and phosphorus.
microorganisms.
pH is sometimes
Bacteria feed on the
adjusted at this
organic matter and
stage.
nutrients within the
water, breaking them
down into harmless
by-products.
STEP 4
STEP 5
TERTIARY TREATMENT
QUATERNARY TREATMENT
Reduction of nutrient loading in
Removal of persistent emergent
wastewater and removal of pathogenic
pollutants (e.g., pharmaceutical
agents. The aim at this stage is to
agents, pesticides) that are poorly
improve water quality.
degradable.
Contaminant types
The EPA has limits for more than 90 contaminants, including
Heavy metals
Pesticides
Disinfectants
Microbes
Radioactive
material
Exposure to
Pesticide
Disinfectants like
Bacteria like
heavy metals
exposure has
chlorine have
Vibrio cholerae
Drinking water
(mercury, arsenic,
been linked
been classified as
and Salmonella
contaminated
etc.) have been
to hormone
probable human
enterica can lead
with radioactive
linked to the
disruption,
carcinogens by
to cholera and
substances
development of
reproductive
the International
typhoid fever,
increases the risk
various cancers.
distortion and
Agency for
respectively.
of cancer and
cancers.
Research on
may harm fetal
Cancer.
development.
– and each one requires a unique technique to detect it.
Ion chromatography
can test for inorganic ions such as nitrates and chlorite.
As a form of liquid chromatography, the method measures
concentrations of ionic species by separating them based on their
interaction with a resin.
Mass spectrometry
coupled with gas and liquid chromatography, can detect heavy metals
and per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS). In recent years, PFAS
have become a contaminant of rising concern as more studies link the
“forever chemicals” (which can be found in many commercial items) to
health defects such as reduced bone density and higher cancer rates.
Quantitative PCR (qPCR)
can amplify and identify any RNA material from bacteria and viruses. For
years, this kind of testing has been instrumental in monitoring levels of
Legionella bacteria in drinking water. In more recent years, qPCR testing
has helped government departments around the world to monitor levels
of COVID-19 in communities.
Geiger counters, gamma ray spectroscopy
and scintillation counting
can check for radiation in industrial waste.
Fouriertransform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR)
and Raman spectroscopy
can detect the presence and number of microplastics (less than five
millimeters in diameter) by plastic type. Pyrolysis–gas chromatography–
mass spectrometry (py-GC/MS) can quantify concentrations of specific
types of microplastics in milligrams per liter. Single particle inductively
coupled plasma mass spectrometry (SP-ICP-MS) is also an emerging
technique that can detect plastic particles down to 100 particles per
milliliter. Despite the increasing health concerns about microplastics,
the testing for this emerging contaminant is often less regulated.
Discrete analyzers
are portable devices that use two parallel measurement techniques
– photometric and electrochemical – to check that wastewater isn’t
contaminated with corrosion and scaling from industrial equipment.
Even post-discharge, wastewater is sometimes tested for
the same contaminants to ensure quality control.
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