1. Rare earth elements (REE) in the urban wastewater of Cotonou (Benin, West Africa).
- Author
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Atinkpahoun, Chrystelle N.H., Pons, Marie-Noëlle, Louis, Pauline, Leclerc, Jean-Pierre, and Soclo, Henri H.
- Subjects
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RARE earth metals , *GADOLINIUM , *SEWAGE , *SOLID waste , *WASTEWATER treatment , *SEWAGE disposal plants , *HYDROTHERMAL deposits - Abstract
The rare earth element (REE) contamination of urban wastewater, which was collected from open sewers and the inlet of a wastewater treatment plant in Cotonou (Benin), was assessed. The drinking water distributed to the inhabitants of Cotonou and water samples from private wells were also analyzed. The sampling occurred between October and December 2016 and the samples were analyzed by ICP-MS. Although the only magnetic resonance imaging facility in Cotonou opened in November 2016, pollution by anthropogenic gadolinium (Gd), which is included in phase contrast agents, was observed: there was 30–620 times more Gd in wastewater samples than in drinking and well water samples. Europium was another REE presenting positive anomalies. It is hypothetized than the europium came from the leachates of solid waste piles in the street. In the absence of any wastewater treatment, the REEs found in the wastewater are spread to the aquatic environment. It would be interesting to monitor the wastewater REEs over the long term. So far, the aquifers used for water provision have not been polluted by the anthropogenic REEs. Image 1 • Anthropogenic rare earth elements anomalies were found in Cotonou (Benin). • Even without magnetic resonance imaging gadolinium was found in wastewater. • Contamination by europium likely related to leachates from solid waste piles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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