The fate of selected pharmaceuticals in solar stills: Transfer, thermal degradation or photolysis?

dc.contributor.authorBaalbaki, Abbas
dc.contributor.authorAyoub, Georges M.
dc.contributor.authorAl-Hindi, Mahmoud
dc.contributor.authorGhauch, Antoine
dc.contributor.departmentDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering
dc.contributor.departmentDepartment of Chemical and Petroleum Engineering
dc.contributor.departmentDepartment of Chemistry
dc.contributor.facultyMaroun Semaan Faculty of Engineering and Architecture (MSFEA)
dc.contributor.facultyFaculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS)
dc.contributor.institutionAmerican University of Beirut
dc.date.accessioned2025-01-24T11:27:00Z
dc.date.available2025-01-24T11:27:00Z
dc.date.issued2017
dc.description.abstractThe increase in demand for, and disposal of, pharmaceuticals, positively correlated with the growing human population, has led to the emergence of contaminants with high environmental and health impacts. Several developing countries that endure problems related to water sufficiency and/or quality resort to the use solar stills as an affordable water treatment method. This research is aimed at investigating the fate of five chemically distinct pharmaceuticals that might pervade solar stills; ibuprofen (IBU), diclofenac (DCF), carbamazepine (CBZ), ampicillin (AMP) and naproxen (NPX). The experiments were conducted under three conditions. The first condition studied the combined effect of temperature and light in simulated field-test-scale solar stills. The effect of temperature as a sole variable was investigated in the second while the third condition studied the effect of light only via concentrated solar power (CSP). Results show that distillates from solar stills did not contain the parent compounds for four out of the five pharmaceuticals. IBU was the only pharmaceutical that showed a transfer via vapor into the distillate with the highest recorded transfer percentage of 2.1% at 50 °C when subjected to temperature alone and 0.6% under the combined effect of temperature and light. In the case of NPX and DCF, the parent compounds did not undergo transfer into the distillate phase; however their degradation by-products did. In addition, the results also showed that in the case of NPX, IBU and CBZ both high temperatures and sunlight combined were required to attain noticeable degradation. CSP accelerated the degradation of DCF, NPX and IBU with a three-minutes-degradation percentage of 44%, 13% and 2% respectively. © 2016 Elsevier B.V.
dc.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.09.082
dc.identifier.eid2-s2.0-84987909448
dc.identifier.pmid27648535
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10938/26752
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherElsevier B.V.
dc.relation.ispartofScience of the Total Environment
dc.sourceScopus
dc.subjectDesalination
dc.subjectPharmaceuticals
dc.subjectPhotolysis
dc.subjectSolar degradation
dc.subjectWater contamination
dc.subjectAmpicillin
dc.subjectCarbamazepine
dc.subjectDiclofenac
dc.subjectDrug residues
dc.subjectIbuprofen
dc.subjectNaproxen
dc.subjectSunlight
dc.subjectWater pollutants, chemical
dc.subjectDeveloping countries
dc.subjectDistillation
dc.subjectDrug products
dc.subjectSolar energy
dc.subjectSolar heating
dc.subjectTemperature
dc.subjectWater pollution
dc.subjectWater treatment
dc.subjectDrug
dc.subjectDrug residue
dc.subjectConcentrated solar power
dc.subjectDegradation by-products
dc.subjectEffect of temperature
dc.subjectHigh temperature
dc.subjectParent compounds
dc.subjectWater treatment methods
dc.subjectDegradation
dc.subjectLight effect
dc.subjectSolar power
dc.subjectTemperature effect
dc.subjectArticle
dc.subjectPhotodegradation
dc.subjectPriority journal
dc.subjectSolar still
dc.subjectSun exposure
dc.subjectChemistry
dc.subjectWater pollutant
dc.titleThe fate of selected pharmaceuticals in solar stills: Transfer, thermal degradation or photolysis?
dc.typeArticle

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