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Evaluating activated carbon adsorption of DOM and micropollutants using fluorescence spectroscopy Kyle Koyu Shimabuku, Anthony M. Kennedy, Riley E. Mulhern, and R. Scott Summers Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.6b04911 • Publication Date (Web): 24 Jan 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on January 29, 2017
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Evaluating activated carbon adsorption of DOM and micropollutants using fluorescence spectroscopy , Kyle K. Shimabuku*,†, Anthony M. Kennedy† ‡, Riley E. Mulhern†, and R. Scott Summers†
†
Department of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering, 428 UCB, University of Colorado, Boulder, Boulder, CO 80309, USA
‡
Technical Service Center, US Bureau of Reclamation, Denver Federal Center Building 67, Denver, CO, 80225, USA * Corresponding author:
[email protected] 9
Abstract Dissolved organic matter (DOM) negatively impacts granular activated carbon
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(GAC) adsorption of micropollutants and is a disinfection by-product precursor. DOM from
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surface waters, wastewater effluent, and 1 kDa size fractions was adsorbed by GAC and
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characterized
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chromatography (SEC). Fluorescing DOM was preferentially adsorbed relative to UV-absorbing
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DOM. Humic-like fluorescence (peaks A and C) was selectively adsorbed relative to
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polyphenol-like fluorescence (peaks T and B) potentially due to size exclusion effects. In the
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surface waters and size fractions, peak C was preferentially removed relative to peak A, whereas
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the reverse was found in wastewater effluent, indicating that humic-like fluorescence is
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associated with different compounds depending on DOM source. Based on specific UV-
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absorption (SUVA), aromatic DOM was preferentially adsorbed. The fluorescence index (FI), if
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interpreted as an indicator of aromaticity, indicated the opposite, but exhibited a strong
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relationship with average molecular weight suggesting FI might be a better indicator of DOM
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size than aromaticity. The influence of DOM intermolecular interactions on adsorption were
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minimal based on SEC analysis. Fluorescence parameters captured the impact of DOM size on
using
fluorescence
spectroscopy,
UV-absorption,
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size
exclusion
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the fouling of 2-methylisoborneol and warfarin adsorption, and correlated with direct
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competition and pore blockage indicators.
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Introduction
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Dissolved organic matter (DOM) is ubiquitous in natural and anthropogenically-impacted
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waters such as surface water and wastewater and plays an important role in environmental and
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engineered aquatic systems. For instance, it can serve as an energy source for bacteria, attenuate
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light, and influence the fate and transport of contaminants. DOM can also adversely impact water
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and wastewater treatment processes (e.g., by consuming disinfectants and fouling membranes)
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and is a disinfection by-product precursor.1-3
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Granular activated carbon (GAC) is used in water and wastewater treatment plants to
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remove DOM, as well as specific organic chemicals present at sub part per billion concentrations
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defined herein as micropollutants. Both DOM concentration, typically measured as dissolved
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organic carbon (DOC), and character influence its adsorbability as well as the extent to which it
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decreases micropollutant adsorption through direct competition and pore blockage, collectively
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termed fouling. The dependence of both DOC and micropollutant breakthrough on initial DOC
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concentration (DOC0) has been successfully modeled in previous studies.4,5 However, it is more
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difficult to model how DOM quality influences its adsorption behavior (i.e., adsorbability and
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micropollutant fouling) because DOM is a heterogeneous mixture of compounds that vary in
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physical and chemical properties. In addition, DOM indicators that capture the impact of DOM
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character on its adsorption behavior, particularly in dynamic flow-through systems, are still
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needed. Several studies have shown that DOM molecular size can determine its adsorption
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behavior.6-9 However, aromaticity and polarity can also be important,10 and it remains unclear
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which characteristic(s) governs DOM adsorption behavior. Also, the extent to which DOM
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interactions (e.g., supramolecular association) affect DOM adsorption remains unclear.
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Fluorescence spectroscopy is one technique that is growing in popularity to characterize
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DOM as it is simple and provides a large amount of information. Molecular size, aromaticity,
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and the presence of specific classes of DOM components have been related to different
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fluorescence parameters such as the peak C intensity to UV-absorption ratio (see Table S1),
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fluorescence index (FI), and fluorescence peaks, respectively.11-13 However, the physicochemical
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properties associated with many fluorescence indices are still unknown. GAC is mainly
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composed of graphite-like sheets that form a heterogeneous, microporous network, and it serves
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as a largely hydrophobic, highly conjugated sieve that simultaneously separates DOM
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components by molecular size and chemical characteristics such as aromaticity.14 However,
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GAC can exhibit variable pore size distributions and surface functional groups and could, e.g.,
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separate DOM as it passes through a column by selectively adsorbing DOM that does not
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experience electrostatic repulsion. Thus, fractionating DOM with GAC provides a unique
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method to characterize the physicochemical properties of fluorescence parameters compared to
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studies that have employed size exclusion chromatography (SEC) and/or high performance
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liquid chromatography (HPLC) where DOM is separated solely by molecular size or
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hydrophobicity, respectively.
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There is growing interest in using fluorescence to characterize DOM adsorption behavior.
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Recent studies have found that fluorescence metrics can be used to predict DOM fouling,15-17
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fluorescing DOM can be more adsorbable than non-fluorescing DOM,15,18 and PAC can
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selectively remove DOM that fluoresces at longer wavelengths.19 Previously, we showed that
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fluorescence parameters correlated with the competitive nature of DOM in batch-powdered
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activated carbon (PAC) systems.17 However, whether or not fluorescence indicators can also be
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used in flow-through systems to capture the influence of DOM character on micropollutant
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fouling is unknown considering that in batch-PAC systems micropollutants and DOM are
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simultaneously exposed to PAC, while in GAC adsorbers DOM can preload adsorption sites.
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The objectives of this study were to: (i) assess the preferential adsorption of fluorescing
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DOM components by GAC, (ii) relate physicochemical and fluorescence properties of DOM,
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(iii) examine if DOM intermolecular interactions influence DOM adsorption by GAC, (iv)
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develop relationships between fluorescence indices with DOC and micropollutant breakthrough,
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and (v) compare the significance of DOM molecular size and aromaticity on DOM adsorption
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and micropollutant fouling. The findings presented here provide new interpretations of
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fluorescence metrics and DOM adsorption phenomena. They also demonstrate that fluorescence
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metrics, which can be determined with on-line sensors or conventional analyzers that
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characterize discrete samples, could be used in the future to predict and monitor the control of
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micropollutants and DOM by GAC. This study focused on the adsorption behavior of surface
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water DOM fractioned with a 1 kDa ultrafilter and the unfractionated DOM, which were also
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examined in a companion study by Kennedy and Summers.20 These waters were chosen because
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they vary distinctly in molecular size and aromaticity. Supplementary experiments were
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conducted with additional surface waters and a wastewater effluent, and in batch-mode with
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three different PACs.
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Materials and Methods
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Waters. Water collected from a non-wastewater impacted mountain reservoir at Big Elk
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Meadows (BEM), CO, which has high DOC (~15 mg/L), low alkalinity (~21 mg/L as CaCO3),
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and low conductivity (~119 µS/cm), was concentrated using reverse-osmosis. If a surface water
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is wastewater impacted is distinguished here because wastewater effluent has a significant
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influence on fluorescence signatures.21,22 The reverse-osmosis concentrate was fractionated using
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a tangential flow ultrafilter (Amicon regenerated cellulose 1 kDa cartridge) into 1
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kDa nominal molecular size fractions. Nominal should be emphasized because DOM that is 1 kDa can be detected both in the 1 kDa ultrafilter retentate and permeate (Figure S1).
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The reverse-osmosis concentrate was also coagulated and used to create two matrices, one only
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spiked with the micropollutants 2-methylisoborneol (MIB) and warfarin (described below) and
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the other was spiked with 27 different micropollutants described in Table S2. The total mass
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concentration of the micropollutants was 3.0 ± 0.9 µg/L. The 27 micropollutants were not
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directly monitored in this study, but were added to make a representative anthropogenic-
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impacted water.23,24 Details describing the isolation, coagulation, and ultrafiltration conditions
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are provided in the Supporting Information (SI).
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The unfractionated concentrate, the 1 kDa fraction, the coagulated
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concentrate, and the micropollutant-spiked coagulated concentrate were each diluted into
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reverse-osmosis treated tap water to target a DOC of 4 mg/L and are designated herein as BEM,
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1K BEM, CB, and CBMP, respectively. Tertiary wastewater effluent collected prior
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to UV disinfection is designated herein as WWef. Water was also collected after alum
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coagulation from the Betasso Water Treatment Plant in Boulder, Colorado, which treats a non-
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wastewater impacted source water and is designated herein as Betasso. Influent water quality
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characteristics are provided in Table 1.
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Target adsorbates. Influent concentrations for micropollutants MIB and warfarin were
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107±3 and 100±6 ng/L, respectively. MIB and warfarin (pKa = 4.5) were predominately neutral
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and anionic, respectively. 14C MIB and 3H warfarin were obtained from American Radiolabeled
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Chemicals, Inc. (St. Louis, MO). They were analyzed with liquid scintillation counting, which
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yielded method detection limits of 19 ng/L for MIB and 8 ng/L for warfarin as detailed in the SI.
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GAC column tests. Rapid small-scale column tests were used to evaluate GAC
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adsorption, and details are provided in the SI. >1K BEM, 1K BEM, 1K BEM fraction, 1K BEM, 1K BEM, 1K BEM, 380 nm in an HPLC.37 Korak et al. showed that Suwanee River NOM,
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Suwanee River Fulvic Acid, and Suwanee River Humic Acid fluoresced in the peak A and C
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regions, though the relative intensities of peak A and C varied in each water.38 Therefore, it is
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more likely that there are different fluorescing substances that exhibit unique peak A/C ratios and
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adsorbabilities, and compounds with smaller A/C ratios are more adsorbable in the surface
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waters and size fractions, while the opposite is true for the WWef.
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The preferential removal of the compounds with different peak A/C ratios in GAC
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columns can be attributed to differences in their molecular size or chemical properties (e.g.,
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aromaticity and/or hydrophobicity). Li et al. showed that peaks A and C simultaneously eluted in
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an HPLC for a surface water and a wastewater effluent,36 which suggests that compounds with
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different A/C ratios exhibit similar polarities. Thus, the compounds in the surface waters that had
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higher peak A/C ratios might be larger and experience more size exclusion than compounds with
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smaller A/C ratios, and the reverse could be true for the WWef. However, Li et al. also found
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that fluorescence intensity in regions near peaks A and C simultaneously eluted using SEC. The
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reason that GAC could fractionate DOM components with different A/C ratios and Li et al. was
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unable to do so with SEC and HPLC could be that GAC can separate DOM through both size
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exclusion and adsorption. For instance, it is conceivable that when GAC adsorbs DOM,
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intermolecular bonds in DOM supramolecular structures are disrupted, which SEC is unable to
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provoke.36 These separated DOM molecules that have different A/C ratios might exhibit
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different MWs and experience varying degrees of size exclusion, which could cause these
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compounds to breakthrough at different rates. Such separations would not happen in an HPLC if
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these compounds had similar polarities.
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DOM breakthrough for the seven waters as assessed by the ratio of the sum of peaks T+B
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to the sum of peaks A+C is shown in Figure 2 and Figure S6. For each water, the peaks
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T+B/peaks A+C ratio values initially broke through above the influent peaks T+B/peaks A+C
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ratio values indicating that peaks T+B are less adsorbable by GAC than peaks A+C in waters
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that vary in MW and source. Several studies have found that the peaks in the T+B regions exhibit
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greater hydrophobicities than peaks in the A+C regions in both surface waters and
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wastewater.36,37,39 According to Li et al., peaks A+C could be more hydrophilic because they are
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dominated by humic substances that are anionic and, therefore, hydrophilic at circumneutral pH
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whereas compounds associated with peaks B+T (e.g., tannins) can be neutral and
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hydrophobic.36,40 However, because peaks A, B, C, and T can be associated with different classes
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of compounds (see below), their hydrophobicities could vary depending on the water source.
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Thus, further research is needed to confirm if peaks T+B are more hydrophobic than A+C
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regardless of the surface water or wastewater effluent. If peaks B+T are more hydrophobic than
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A+C here, the faster peak T+B breakthrough suggests that they are associated with larger DOM
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compounds that experience more size exclusion because GAC preferentially adsorbs small,
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hydrophobic compounds. Studies using SEC with fluorescence detection have found that peaks
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in the T+B regions exhibit greater MWs than peaks in the A+C regions.39,41
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While peaks A+C and peaks T+B are often referred to as humic-like and protein-like,
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respectively, DOM components that do not fit into these classifications can fluoresce in these
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regions.42 Although the hypothesis that peaks T+B are greater in MW than peaks A+C is in
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agreement with peaks T+B being associated with proteins, as proteins typically exhibit greater
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MWs (>10 kDa) than humic substances (average MWs < 5~ kDa), high MW polyphenolic
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compounds other than proteins (e.g., tannins MWs 0.5-20 kDa) can also exhibit “protein-like”
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fluorescence in surface waters and WWef.41-44 In addition, peaks T+B were concentrated in