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6581971 
Journal Article 
Chlorothalonil transformation products in drinking water resources: Widespread and challenging to abate 
Kiefer, K; Bader, T; Minas, N; Salhi, E; Janssen, EML; Von Gunten, U; Hollender, J 
2020 
Water Research
ISSN: 0043-1354
EISSN: 1879-2448 
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD 
OXFORD 
183 
116066 
English 
Chlorothalonil, a fungicide applied for decades worldwide, has recently been banned in the European Union (EU) and Switzerland due to its carcinogenicity and the presence of potentially toxic transformation products (TPs) in groundwater. The spread and concentration range of chlorothalonil TPs in different drinking water resources was examined (73 groundwater and four surface water samples mainly from Switzerland). The chlorothalonil sulfonic acid TPs (R471811, R419492, R417888) occurred more frequently and at higher concentrations (detected in 65–100% of the samples, ≤2200 ngL−1) than the phenolic TPs (SYN507900, SYN548580, R611968; detected in 10–30% of the samples, ≤130 ngL−1). The TP R471811 was found in all samples and even in 52% of the samples above 100 ngL−1, the drinking water standard in Switzerland and other European countries. Therefore, the abatement of chlorothalonil TPs was investigated in laboratory and pilot-scale experiments and along the treatment train of various water works, comprising aquifer recharge, UV disinfection, ozonation, advanced oxidation processes (AOPs), activated carbon treatment, and reverse osmosis. The phenolic TPs can be abated during ozonation (second order rate constant kO3 ∼104 M−1s−1) and by reaction with hydroxyl radicals (OH) in AOPs (kOH ∼109 M−1s−1). In contrast, the sulfonic acid TPs, which occurred in higher concentrations in drinking water resources, react only very slowly with ozone (kO3 <0.04 M−1s−1) and OH (kOH <5.0 × 107 M−1s−1) and therefore persist in ozonation and OH-based AOPs. Activated carbon retained the very polar TP R471811 only up to a specific throughput of 25 m3kg-1 (20% breakthrough), similarly to the X-ray contrast agent diatrizoic acid. Reverse osmosis was capable of removing all chlorothalonil TPs by ≥98%. 
Pesticide; Metabolite; Water treatment; Groundwater; Ozonation; Activated carbon