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HERO ID
3983624
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
PET bottle use patterns and antimony migration into bottled water and soft drinks: the case of British and Nigerian bottles
Author(s)
Tukur, A; Sharp, L; Stern, B; Tizaoui, C; Benkreira, H
Year
2012
Is Peer Reviewed?
Yes
Journal
Journal of Environmental Monitoring
ISSN:
1464-0325
EISSN:
1464-0333
Volume
14
Issue
4
Page Numbers
1237-1247
Language
English
PMID
22402759
DOI
10.1039/c2em10917d
Web of Science Id
WOS:000302017700015
Abstract
While antimony has been reported to migrate from PET bottles into contents, reports on bottled water and soft drinks usage and PET bottle reuse patterns are currently unavailable in the literature. Bottle use conditions and patterns are important determinants of antimony migration. In this work a survey assessing the pattern of bottle use and reuse in Britain and Nigeria was undertaken. The survey findings influenced the design of laboratory experiments that assessed the migration of antimony from PET bottles into water and soft drinks. Typical storage durations for bottled contents between purchase and opening for use were 7 days or less. However storage of up to one year was reported. Bottle reuse was high and similar for the two countries with reuse durations being higher in Nigeria. The antimony concentration in 32 PET bottle materials from Britain and Nigeria were similar and ranged between 177 and 310 mg kg(-1). For 47 freshly purchased British bottled contents antimony concentration ranged between 0.03 and 6.61 μg L(-1) with only one sample exceeding the EU acceptable limit. Concentrations of Cd, Ge, Zn, Al, Be, Ti, Co and Pb were also measured. At realistic temperatures of 40 and 60 °C antimony concentration in deionised water in bottles remained below the EU acceptable limit even after 48 h exposure. The limit was exceeded for most exposures at 80 °C. Concentration of antimony in some bottled contents exceeded the EU limit after 11 months of storage at room temperature. Bottle aging and increase in bottle volume were associated with decreased migration of antimony from bottles.
Tags
IRIS
•
Phthalates – Targeted Search for Epidemiological Studies
Excluded
Source - August 2017 Update (Private)
WOS - Forward Search Results
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