Persistence of artificial sweeteners in a 15-year-old septic system plume

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Publication Type pre-print
School or College College of Mines & Earth Sciences
Creator Solomon, Douglas Kip
Other Author Robertson, W. D.; Van Stempvoort, D. R.; Homewood, J., Brown, S. J.; Spoelstra, J., Schiff, S. L.
Title Persistence of artificial sweeteners in a 15-year-old septic system plume
Date 2013-01-01
Description Groundwater contamination from constituents such as NO3 -, often occurs where multiple sources are present making source identification difficult. This study examines a suite of major ions and trace organic constituents within a well defined septic system plume in southern Ontario, Canada (Long Point site) for their potential use as wastewater tracers. The septic system has been operating for 20 years servicing a large, seasonal-use campground and tritium/helium age dating indicates that the 200 m long monitored section of the plume is about 15 years old. Four parameters are elevated along the entire length of the plume as follows; the mean electrical conductivity value (EC) in the distal plume zone is 926 μS/cm which is 74% of the mean value below the tile bed, Na+ (14.7 33 mg/L) is 43%, an artificial sweetener, acesulfame (12.1 μg/L) is 23% and Cl- (71.5 mg/L) is 137%. EC and Cl- appear to be affected by dispersive dilution with overlying background groundwater that has lower EC but has locally higher Cl- as result of the use of a dust suppressant (CaCl2) in the campground. Na, in addition to advective dilution, could be depleted by weak adsorption. Acesulfame, in addition to the above processes could be influenced by increasing consumer use in recent years. Nonetheless, both Na+ and acesulfame remain elevated throughout the plume by factors of more than 100 and 40 1000 respectively compared to background levels, and are strong indicators of wastewater impact at this site. EC and Cl- are less useful because their contrast with background values is much less (EC) or because other sources are present (Cl-). Nutrients (NO3 -, NH4 +, PO4 3-, K+) and pathogens (E. coli) do not persist in the distal plume zone and are less useful as wastewater indicators here. The artificial sweetener, acesulfame, has persisted at high concentrations in the Long Point plume for at least 15 years (and this timing agrees with tritium/helium-3 dating) and this compound likely occurs at uniquely high concentrations in domestic wastewater. As such, it holds considerable promise as a powerful new tracer of wastewater impact in groundwater.
Type Text
Publisher Elsevier
Volume 477
First Page 43
Last Page 54
Language eng
Bibliographic Citation Robertson, W.D., Van Stempvoort, D. R., Solomon, D. K., Homewood, J., Brown, S. J., Spoelstra, J., & Schiff, S. L. (2013). Persistence of artificial sweeteners in a 15-year-old septic system plume. Journal of Hydrology, 477, 43-54.
Rights Management (c) Elsevier ; Authors manuscript from Robertson, W.D., Van Stempvoort, D. R., Solomon, D. K., Homewood, J., Brown, S. J., Spoelstra, J., & Schiff, S. L. (2013). Persistence of artificial sweeteners in a 15-year-old septic system plume. Journal of Hydrology, 477, 43-54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhydrol.2012.10.048
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 1,699,411 bytes
Identifier uspace,18154
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Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6z616vb
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