Tina Knowles Lawson

A carcinogen known as NDMA can form during the process of treating wastewater, and USC researchers are studying the formation pathway in hopes of figuring out a way to eliminate the molecules that cause it. (Photo/Hasan Zulic )

Science/Technology

Chemical-forming carcinogen in recycled water revealed by USC engineers

USC Viterbi team began its study on NDMA after contradictory findings surface in the environmental research community

April 10, 2018 Ashleen Knutsen

The chemical responsible for forming a potent carcinogen in recycled water has been confirmed by researchers at the USC Viterbi School of Engineering.

USC Viterbi Assistant Professor Daniel McCurry, undergraduate student Meredith Huang and master’s student Shiyang Huang have looked at the carcinogen N-nitrosodimethyalmine, or NDMA, in recycled wastewater. The team began its study after contradictory findings surfaced in the environmental research community, causing hesitation in the adoption of NDMA intervention methods at treatment facilities. Their work was published in Environmental Science and Technology Letters as the March cover study.

“The recent drought in California and subsequent water vulnerability has increased interest in water recycling,” said Meredith Huang, the study’s first author. “However, disinfection byproducts like NDMA, formed in the process of treating wastewater, are harmful to humans and introduce some issues when the goal is re-consumption.”

The origin story

illustration of NDMA
Results of the USC study were published in the March issue of Environmental Science and Technology Letters. (Illustration/Courtesy of Environmental Science and Technology Letters)

In the late ’90s, high concentrations of NDMA were found in what was otherwise extremely clean recycled wastewater, which in most states is discharged into rivers that are used as sources for drinking water. This discovery set off a years-long research effort by several labs to figure out how the harmful chemical compound was forming.

“The concentration of NDMA that we’re worried about is very, very low,” said McCurry, who works in the Sonny Astani Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering.

Unlike a lot of organic pollutants in drinking water where the regulatory limit may be in the microgram per liter range, for NDMA, the regulatory guideline in many places ranges from 10 nanograms per liter to 100 nanograms per liter, he said.

Most recycled wastewater that will be used as drinking water through a process known as potable reuse first enters the ground before it goes to a drinking water plant. The soil acts as a filter, removing chemicals and degrading harmful compounds like NDMA. But the high cost of pumping water into and out of the ground has led to an increased interest in direct potable reuse, where recycled wastewater goes directly to a drinking water plant.

“NDMA is one of the major obstacles to direct potable reuse because it is really difficult to get rid of thorough traditional treatment processes,” McCurry said. It is instead easier and more affordable to lower NDMA concentrations by eliminating the molecules responsible for its formation.

While the team’s study confirms the identity of the compound responsible for NDMA formation and encourages treatment plants to continue implementing intervention methods, the work is far from complete. Huang is currently working on a model that will show in detail the complete mechanism of NDMA formation.

“Our results are based on NDMA yield experiments that only consider the final products of the reactions. The exact pathway from precursors to NDMA has not been discovered yet,” Huang said. “Understanding the complete mechanism would give us more information to explain what factor — pH, temperature, other chemicals — would affect NDMA formation in practice.”