Noriatsu
Ozaki
*,
Makoto
Funaki
,
Tomonori
Kindaichi
and
Akiyoshi
Ohashi
Graduate School of Advanced Science and Engineering, Hiroshima University, Higashihiroshima, 1-4-1, Higashihirohima, 739-8527, Japan. E-mail: ojaki@hiroshima-u.ac.jp
First published on 16th March 2023
The decrepitude of infrastructures currently threatens developed countries, including Japan. Thus, the development of effective management and maintenance techniques is important. In this respect, the leakage and destruction of separated domestic sewer pipelines are worsening in urban areas because of poor maintenance, as they have existed for over 60 years. Even minor cracks could cause sewer leakage and severe potential subsurface and surface water pollution. Thus, in order to examine the urban stormwater pollution due to leakages of domestic sewers in urban areas, the concentrations of domestic-use chemicals (fragrance compounds) and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) were measured in storm drains on no-rain days in an urban watershed area with old separated sewers developed over 40 years back. From the measurements, the concentrations of the domestic-use chemicals were higher at the final outlet of the storm drain than those in rainfall and puddle waters. On the other hand, the PAH concentration was similar to or higher for rainfall and puddle waters. The high concentration of the domestic-use chemicals in the discharge was mostly attributed to chemical inputs during subsurface water transfers, rather than solid/liquid/air partition changes. By measuring concentrations in the storm drain networks in the area, two hot spots were found. One was suggested to be from direct discharge from a household, and the other could be due to double misconnection from one or more households (unrevealed) to a vestige of an old sewer pipeline and from the vestige to a storm pipeline. The stable high concentration at the final discharge was suggested to be due to the loading from these hot spots. The study pointed out the possibility of leakages of domestic sewages due to poor maintenance in old domestic sewer networks, which can increase the risks for public health and indicated the effectiveness of fragrance compounds as tracers for the leakages.
Water impactA field research technique for finding the leakage from decrepit sewer pipelines into urban water areas has been demonstrated. A possible leakage was found by this methodology in the central district in an urban area, using fragrance substances as a tracer. While the tracers used in this study were found to be applicable, the background level, i.e., the rain input also proved to be nonnegligible. |
Leaks from sewer pipelines may pollute urban groundwater and surface water. In these cases, storm pipelines would be important paths for the transfer of such pollutants because storm discharge networks are sometimes even older than sewer pipelines.4 Sewage leakage would vary greatly by location, and effective diagnosis is difficult because the leakage is ordinarily hidden in subsurface layers and just a point or line (one-dimensional) probing is available for at least the two-dimensional distribution under subsurface layers. In this regard, various diagnostic methods have been developed (Panasiuk et al.4 [stormwater]; De Silva et al.;5 Rutsch6 [groundwater]), such as direct eye (or camera) observation, spot leakage measurements, sewer condition monitoring, and tracer spiking testing. Estimates for leak ratios sometimes vary up to thousands of times,7,8 possibly reflecting the spatial diversions in subsurface layers, and the long history differences in developing the sewer networks. Studies confirming such influences are limited, and their methodologies have not been well developed,9,10 despite the leakage situation being expected to be rather diverse. The applicable detection technique would, by necessity, be common regardless of the situations when in fact, different application techniques should be considered for different situations.
There have been several studies evaluating the contribution of domestic wastewater contamination in storm drains and surface water.11–18 They have two different areas of focus: to examine the contamination level of the surface water for a wide spatial range, and to find the specific leakage points. Tracers for detection are classified as bacterial and chemical analysis. For chemical analysis, Buerge et al.11 chose caffeine as a tracer, and the concentrations in rivers in urban to rural areas and lakes were measured in Switzerland. The concentrations ranged from 6–250 ng L−1, and from a mass-balance analysis, the authors concluded that more than half of the caffeine would come from untreated domestic wastewater. Sankararamakrishnan and Guo12 measured fecal coliforms and caffeine in storm drains in an urban residential area facing a small lake in New Jersey, USA, and found that both contaminants were high in a storm drainage during rainfall events (fecal coliforms: 5000 − >160000 MPN/100 mL, caffeine: 45000 ± 3000 ng L−1). Sauvé et al.13 measured caffeine concentrations of the discharges after rainfalls in small streams, brooks, collectors and storm sewer outfall pipes from a stormwater system in a residential area in Montreal, Canada. The concentrations were up to 104 ng L−1 with a high correlation with E. coli, suggesting the influence of domestic wastewater runoff observation by high caffeine concentration. Carbamazepine was also measured as a tracer, but no correlation with E. coli was obtained. Yin et al.14 analyzed storm drainage during dry periods at a residential area in Shanghai, China, with acesulfame and theanine as markers of domestic wastewater, which were chosen from 52 chemical species as candidates from their precedented pollution source analysis. Their detected concentrations were up to 104 ng L−1 in order, and the authors claimed this would be due to the inappropriate inflow of domestic wastewater. Turning further to studies on groundwater pollutions, we find that in addition to caffeine, carbamazepine, and acesulfame,2,19,20 amidotrizoic acid2 and HHCB20 have been applied as successful chemical tracers of domestic wastewater contamination. However, the number of studies are limited, and background effects such as rainwater have yet to be fully discussed.
The purpose of this study is to explore the leakage situation of domestic sewers in an urban separated sewer area having an aged separate sewer and storm drain network. To determine this, the extent of micropollutant discharges thought to be derived from domestic wastewater was investigated in the baseflow of the storm drain during no-rainfall periods, and the source of the discharges was explored. The target area is a district where a separate sewer system had been developed dating back to 40 years. Artificially synthesized fragrance substances, which are stably detected in urban domestic sewers worldwide, were chosen as a tracer of the domestic sewage. Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) were also introduced as reference substances. These substances have been included in major non-point pollutants from urban areas, such as vehicle exhaust, asphalt and tire debris, roof linings.21 Their introduction enables a comparison of the sources and paths with the tracers, as the pollution sources and the paths are considered to be different.
For the first step, the concentration of the fragrance substances was measured for the water flowing from the most downstream storm drain of a rain outflow basin during dry periods in an urban area with a separated domestic wastewater system. In the studied area, water steadily flowed from the storm drain even on dry days, albeit in small amounts. For the second step, following the observation of the stable higher concentration in the first step, the distribution of running water or standing water in storm drainages in the area was measured during no-rainfall periods, and the hot spots were explored. Their emission source was inferred from further field surveillance around the determined hot spot areas. Based on the measurements, the possibility of discharge of domestic wastewater into water bodies, its sources and impacts, and the validity of the methodology of this study were discussed.
Sample name | Number |
---|---|
Rainwater | 10 |
Puddle water | 15 |
Urban storm drain water (USD A) | 11 |
Urban storm drains | 30 (12 points) |
Domestic sewage | 4 |
In the second stage, the storm drain water samplings were conducted in the catchment area during no-rain periods. Standing residue waters were collected from storm drain pitches during no-rainfall periods. All these waters were collected from the area shown in “Storm drain pipeline” in Fig. 1, and at a time more than 48 h after the last rainfall ended. Samplings were conducted one to seven times for each rainfall event interval. Characterizing the sampling point, the northern part is a historical area (points N, J, R, K, and C). The southern part is a comparably newer residential and commercial area (points M, E, I, P, and Q), though not simply divided. Some pipelines are in the vicinity of the older sewer pipelines (N, J, R, and K; see “Domestic sewer pipeline” in Fig. 1). For N and J, the storm drain also seemed to be older (Picture of points J, N, and Q are shown in Fig. S1†).
For the analysis, 0.2–2 L of water samples were collected. Thereafter, the concentrations of suspended solids (SSs; filtered using a glass-fiber filter with a cutoff pore size of 0.7 μm) and the targeted micropollutant concentrations were measured for both SS (particulate) and dissolved phases. The targeted compounds were classified as domestic-use chemicals and PAHs. For domestic-use chemicals, five fragrance compounds (FCs) were targeted: 6,7-dihydro-1,1,2,3,3-pentamethyl-4(5H)-indanone (known as cashmeran), (1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8-octahydro-2,3,8,8-tetramethylnaphthalene-2yl)ethan-1-one (known as iso-E-super), 1,3,4,6,7,8-hexahydro-4,6,6,7,8,8-hexamethylcyclopenta[g]-2-benzopyran (known as galaxolide), 1-(5,6,7,8-tetrahydro-3,5,5,6,8,8-hexamethyl-2-naphthalenyl)-ethanone (known as tonalide), and musk ketone 4′-tert-butyl-2′,6′-dimethyl-3′,5′-dinitroacetophenone. For the PAHs, three species were targeted: phenanthrene, fluoranthene, and pyrene. These FCs are frequently detected in high concentrations in domestic wastewaters in many countries, including the United States, European countries, and Japan,22–33 and are thus expected to be effective tracers. For conventional water quality indices, SS and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations were measured.
Mixtures of benzophenone-d10, phenanthrene-d10, and chrysene-d12 were applied as internal standards for the correction of the gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) peak detection sensitivity for the five FCs, phenanthrene, and both fluoranthene and pyrene, respectively.
Musk compounds and PAHs have been extensively measured in domestic wastewater in various studies, such as our previous measurements at the inlet of a wastewater treatment plant for the area including this watershed.33,34 The concentrations of each PAH species were in the order of tens to thousands of ng L−1,35–42 whereas those of the musk compounds were in the order of several thousands to tens of thousands of ng L−1.43 Our results for domestic wastewater were comparable to these values.
The rainwater concentration and puddle water concentration were 35 ± 18 ng L−1 and 27 ± 25 ng L−1, respectively. Both were comparable, indicating that the surface concentration level primarily reflected the rainfall loading itself. To compare the different places of the puddles, the other puddle water (points 2–7) concentration was 2–25 ng L−1, which was comparable to point 1 (the concentration was 20 ng L−1 at the time), and rainwater. Studies involving fragrance substances in rainfall are very limited, and only a few reports were found. Peters et al.44 measured xeno-estrogenic compound concentrations for the rainfall water nationwide in the Netherlands, and the target compounds included DPMI, HHCB, AHTN, and MK. The most frequently detected compound was HHCB (50/50 samples), followed by AHTN, (44/50 samples) and the level was 2.3–25 ng L−1, which was comparable to our results.
Other than those for domestic sewage, different patterns can be seen for DOC, FCs, and PAHs. DOC followed the order: puddle ∼ USD A > rain. The five FCs followed the order: USD > rain ∼ puddle, and the pattern for the three PAHs was rain ∼ puddle ∼ USD A.
The observed pattern differences potentially reflect the source, air/water/solid partition, and/or biological/photolytic/hydrolysis decomposition differences. Because the targeted compounds are not regarded as very reactive substances and the transfer from rain precipitation to discharge via puddles occurs in a shorter time compared with regional or global transference, decomposition difference is not expected to play a primary role. For the air/water/solid partition, in terms of the octanol–water partition coefficient (Kow) and Henry's constant, log Kow is in the order of four to seven, whereas Henry's constant is from 0.001 to 1000 Pa m3 mol−1 (Fig. S3†). Prior to the discussion of the transfer, the water transfer direction is naturally presumed to be from rain to puddle and puddle to USD A, but it is not necessarily limited only to this passage. However, this path cannot occur in reverse, at least for the primal path. In the passage from rain or puddle to USD A, the concentrations of the five FCs increased; in contrast, those of the three PAHs decreased. However, this difference cannot be simply explained by the phase change. For the liquid–solid change, the decrease in concentrations observed for the three PAHs from absorption in the path should have occurred similarly or to a greater extent for the five FCs because Kow is similar to or higher for the latter. Meanwhile, the liquid–air change cannot be explained by the vaporization difference alone. This is because the vaporization difference would have resulted in the concentration decreasing more for the five FCs because their Henry's constant is far greater than that of the three PAHs.
Unlike the partition or decomposition processes, leakage from domestic sewage can compellingly explain such concentration changes. If the increased concentrations of the five FCs at USD A were attributable to domestic sewage, this increase would have occurred similarly for the three PAHs. In this case, the increased concentrations for the three PAHs must be negligible because the concentration ratio of USD A to domestic sewage was only in the order of one-hundredth for the five FCs. In this regard, the concentrations of the three PAHs did not significantly increase, which does not contradict the stated case. The fact that the concentration decreased from puddle to USD A should be explained by some different processes. Still, as mentioned earlier, a partition change or decomposition cannot be an alternative explanation for the increased concentrations of the five FCs at USD A.
Overall, the five FCs' high concentrations may reasonably be attributed to domestic sewage. Meanwhile, the three PAHs are considered to be from atmospheric fallout,45,46 including rainfall, as measured in our results (19 ± 8.8 ng L−1; Fig. 2), or from roadside particulate matter, which is presumably mainly emitted from vehicle transportation activities in urban areas.34,47
To consider the effect of the solid–liquid partition in more detail, the dissolved phase concentrations, particulate phase content per SS weight, and the solid–liquid partition coefficient Kp, denoted by the following, are shown for every compound (Fig. 3).
Kp [L kg−1 SS] = (solid contents [ng kg−1 SS])/(liquid concentration [ng L−1]) |
Fig. 5 Spatial distribution of 3 PAHs and 5 FCs concentration for a) dissolved + particulate phase and b) dissolved phase concentration. |
For the FCs, we found three stable high-concentration points (Q, N, and J) where the concentrations for the five FCs were 897–1399 ng L−1, comparable with those for the five FCs in domestic sewage (5273–7288 ng L−1). For point Q, the water was taken from a branch pipe outlet, rather than a major open channel (Fig. S2†). At one time in a field observation, the water discharged occasionally and intermittingly despite no rainfall, suggesting that there are some discharges other than standing rain residues, and the high concentrations of the five FCs may be attributed to this undefined source. For point J, the drain was directly connected only to the upstream point N. This indicated that the water at point J directly comes from point N, and that these two points must practically be just one hot spot.
Besides the samplings, the electrical conductivity (EC) was measured on a day with no rainfall, and their patterns were then compared (Fig. 4c). The EC values were higher for the higher FC concentration points, but were not necessarily simply correlated with them. Fig. 6 shows the relation between EC and the sum of the five FCs for the dissolved phase of the drainage samplings. The FCs' concentrations tended to increase with EC, but not necessarily. If the place-specific pollution criterion of the FCs was set to around 40 ng L−1, which mostly exceeded the rainfall concentration level (mean + sd was 34 [= 22 ± 12] mg L−1 or the highest value of 44 ng L−1 for rainwater), the points having <100 μS cm−1 of EC would mostly meet the criterion. Furthermore, there were at least no excessively high concentrations (>200 ng L−1) would be found for the points below this criterion. In addition, excessively high concentrations were mostly found for >300 μS cm−1. Because of the simplicity of the handling and measurements of the EC meter, the EC values are good indicators for in-field screening.
Collectively, we found two high-concentration points for domestic-use chemicals (i.e., the five FCs): points Q and N. Possible sources include the accidental spills of personal-use perfumes, cleaning, and others from some openings of storm pipes, such as gratings or leakages from domestic sewer pipelines, or misconnections. For both Q and N, the concentrations were measured several times for different rainfall intervals to ensure that the high concentrations were not accidental, and the concentrations were almost always higher than 200 ng L−1 (198–2541 ng L−1 for point Q [n = 7] and 549–2208 ng L−1 for N [n = 7]). For point Q, we found from a document of the city bureau that one household, located very close to being upstream of the point, was unconnected to the domestic sewer pipeline. Some graywater may be discharged from the household. However, the precise situation was not determined because of privacy concerns. Still, although further exploration was not possible due to legal barriers, the authors showed the effectiveness of the use of targeted compounds as tracers of inflows of domestic sewage.
Meanwhile, for points N and J, no possible household inflow was suggested primarily in the vicinity and along the upstream storm pipelines both by the information from the city bureau and the field survey around the area, including some interviews of the residents. Thus, further field observation was conducted occasionally to justify the high concentrations of the FCs. During such field observation, a discharge from one small hole was found accidentally on a wall in a subsurface stormwater channel connecting to point J (Fig. S4†). Water was found flowing for a time, and high concentrations of fragrances were detected in the water (790 and 1350 ng L−1 [n = 2]). This hole was connected to an old pipeline (seemingly a domestic sewer pipeline) because two small manholes for this pipeline were found, and the term “sewage” was engraved on the manhole surface. However, this old pipeline was not the sewer pipeline because the true sewer pipeline runs just next to it, which was validated by the official sewer map published by the municipality. Moreover, no other pipeline was registered there. Upon further exploration, we found that this line seemed to start just around 30 m away from the other end. The role of this old pipe was not clarified even upon inquiry to a section of the sewer pipeline management office in the city bureau afterward. Nonetheless, this pipeline seemed to be a vestige of an old sewer pipeline (probably from 50 years back). We found no households disconnecting to the sewer pipelines (unlike the household near point J mentioned above) around this vestige, at least nominally. If the intermittent discharge with a very high concentration of FCs was some discharge of domestic wastewater, this must have been due to some unintentional misconnection. Actually, point N was in the historical district, or old town, and on the former historical principal road. The town area is dated back to several hundred years. There may be historically some community sewage drainage systems. When the pipeline was replaced by the municipalities, some old misconnection was possibly left behind. The construction date of the municipality was also older, dating back to the 1980s (see Fig. 1, “Domestic sewer piepline”), and the detailed record was possibly lost. With this respect, points R and K are also in the same old town area, having similarly older sewer pipelines. However, the road pavement was renewed about ten years ago, and the storm drains were also most likely renewed at that time. The sewer leakages must be blocked by the renewal, if existing, and this may have resulted in our stable lower fragrance concentrations.
For further examination, some different methodologies would be required, such as the on-site investigation of possible misconnecting households. Still, the candidates for some leakages were focused down to very limited ranges, indicating the effectiveness of this methodology.
Lastly, the usage and the limitation of this methodology are discussed. The points are as follows: first, we applied fragrance substances as a tracer of domestic sewers; second, PAHs were applied for reference; third, the rain and urban surface puddle water concentration were measured and compared with those of domestic sewer and urban drainage. There are many trace organic substances that are introduced for tracers of domestic sewers, such as artificial sweeteners, drugs, caffeine, and others. Among them, fragrance substances were shown to be a promising application for the monitoring of sewer leakage, although the application of such fragrance substances is rather limited to date.11,20,50 At the same time, a limitation was also unveiled by the results, i.e., the background effect of rainwater. The fragrance substances were contained in rain and puddle water in the 1–10 ng L−1 range. The level was 0.1–1% of those of domestic sewage. This may be due to volatilization from domestic usage, and the effect should be clarified in the future. Considering the influences of the leakages of direct domestic sewages into storm discharges, this indicates that an infiltration-loading contribution cannot be proved by these substances if the contribution is just an order of one percent. Although this finding showed the drawbacks of the application of the substances, the significance of the measurements of rainwater and subsequent ground surface water was shown by this study. The measurements of such compounds in rainwater were very limited.44 Our study showed that there should be further investigations in the future.
These days, the deterioration of infrastructures is becoming a concern for developed countries, including Japan. Among these, domestic sewer pipeline deterioration is one important issue. Pipeline renewal and earthquake resistance are pressing issues for the sustainability of urban areas. However, pipeline renewal is not progressing well because of the financial limitations of governments. With this predicament, effective prioritization is important, which requires an important technique for deterioration diagnosis. However, this is not easy, especially as sewer pipelines are hidden in subsurface areas and given the extreme total length of these pipes. Thus, there must be not just one ultimate technique for such diagnosis, and our methodology is just one of such techniques.
One diagnosis difficulty is that measurements of chemicals are not so simple for wide aerial surveillance. Still, in some cases, measurements are easier than direct eye or camera observations of sewer pipelines, especially in congested urban areas. Another possible merit of such measurements is that they can detect resultant thin leakages directly even in cases when the crack is difficult to observe directly by eye or using cameras. Presently, extraction and measurement methods such as GC/MS are unfortunately not easy as routine tasks. However, as our study suggested, this method can be more effective if it is combined with simple EC measurements as screening methods. Furthermore, if the required detection level is proven at a certain level, for example, at around one to several hundreds of ng L−1 in our case, the minimum requirement of the sampling volume can be lessened to just a hundred milliliters or less per sample, making the whole pretreatment processing far easier. Moreover, mass spectrometry with chromatographic instruments could become a more affordable commodity technique in the future.
The extent and spread of influence can be discussed if the long-time average loading is evaluated from a set of consecutive measurements. In this study, we did not conduct flow rate measurements combined with concentration measurements; instead, the measurements were performed just intermittently. Thus, we fell short of knowing the leakage loading qualitatively. For the next step, the evaluation of mass loading and the extent of leakage in areal scales would be possible through consecutive measurements at the final discharge point (at USD A in our case). The significance of the methodology of this investigation is that we introduced a process for indicating the point of leakage with limited effort. The choice or combination of this kind of probing technique and systemic loading quantification on aerial scales would become important according to the demands of future surveying. In the future, a comprehensive approach to detecting and evaluating loading, and its combination with eye/camera observations shall become necessary techniques for old sewer pipeline management.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d2ew00736c |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023 |