
Waterless Urinals Remove Select Pharmaceuticals from Urine by Phase Partitioning
Author(s) -
Utsav Thapa,
David Hanigan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
environmental science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.851
H-Index - 397
eISSN - 1520-5851
pISSN - 0013-936X
DOI - 10.1021/acs.est.9b06205
Subject(s) - chemistry , urine , sealant , chromatography , urination , hydraulic retention time , environmental chemistry , organic chemistry , effluent , environmental engineering , urinary system , environmental science , endocrinology , medicine , biochemistry
We investigated the potential for waterless urinal sealants fluids to remove pharmaceuticals from urine. 1 H NMR, FTIR, and GC/MS characterization of the fluids indicated that they are mostly composed of aliphatic compounds. Removal of ethinyl estradiol was >40% for two of the three sealant fluids during simulated urination to a urinal cartridge but removal of seven other compounds with greater hydrophilicity was <30%. At equilibrium with Milli-Q water, ≥ 89% partitioning to the sealant phase was observed for three compounds with pH adjusted log K ow (log D ow ) > 3.5. At equilibrium with synthetic urine, removal ranged widely from 2% to 100%. K ow was poorly correlated with removal for both matrices at equilibrium, but D ow was correlated with removal from synthetic urine for two of the three sealants, indicating that ionization and hydrophilicity control partitioning between the urine and sealant phases. To improve removal during urination, where equilibrium is not achieved, we increased the hydraulic retention time 100-fold over that of typical male urination. Removal of specific hydrophobic compounds increased, indicating that both hydrophobicity and kinetics control removal. Removal of ethinyl estradiol was ≥90% for all sealants in the increased hydraulic retention time experiment, demonstrating the potential for implementation to female urinals.