Extent, related research and remedication meassures
Chemistry of arsenic, Use of arsenic, reference value , Oxidation method, Ion exchange method, Membrane method
1. Ground water Arsenic contamination:
Extent, related research and remediation
measures in India
-by
Dr. Sayan Das
MPH 8th Cohort, ICMR-SPH,NIE
2. Overview
Chemistry of Arsenic
Extent of ground water poisoning with arsenic
Related research on this ground
Remedial measures for it: India and global
perspective
4. Chemistry of Arsenic (2/4)
In ground water:
At pH 6-8 : H2AsVO4
- and HAsVO4
2 (oxidized env.
Eh = 0.2-0.5 V)
H3AsIIIO3 (reduced condition. Eh = 0-0.1 V)
5. Chemistry of Arsenic (3/4)
In Soil: Arsenite and arsenate (inorganic)
MMA acid , DMA acid, TMA acid (org. form)
(on reduction) (anoxic cond.)
Di/trimethyl arsine(AsH3)
Flooded cond. (Eh= 0-0.1 V, pH 6-8)
• As acid sp. And arsenite oxyanions- H3AsO3
0, H2AsO4
-, HAsO4
2-, AsO4
3-
Aerobic cond.
• Under aerobic (oxidizing) conditions As V predominates- As acid sp. and
arsenate oxyanions (H3AsO4
0, H2AsO4
-, HAsO4
2-, AsO4
3-) (Fitz and Wenzel,
2002; Takahashi et al., 2004).
6. Chemistry of Arsenic (4/4)
In Rhizosphere:
Micro-organisms oxidized rhizosphere
Precipitation of FeOOH
(Fe plaques on root of wetland crops)
7. • Occurs naturally in soil and
minerals and ores that
contains Lead and copper
• When heated Arsenic rises up
smokestack as a fine dust
• Cannot be used in agriculture
• Used to pressure treat wood
• Arsenic V is found in water
• Mainly found in marine
organism
• Can still be used in Agriculture
• Primarily cotton
• Improve properties when added
to metal
• Used in lead acid batteries
• Semiconductors and LEDs
• Arsenic II found in water
Inorganic Vs. organic
Arsenic
Inorganic Organic
8. Sources of Arsenic in Ground Water
Two hypotheses: Geogenic origin
1. Oxidation of pyrite(FeS2) & solubilisation of As
FeS2 + 2H2O + 502 = FeSO4 + 2H2SO4
As liberated in aquifers
2. Reduction of As rich FeOOH in anoxic(depleted dissolved
O2) g.water (due to microbial oxidation of sedimentary
organic matter, paddy cultivation, high WT)
9. Uses of Arsenic
‘Poison of Kings
Marsh and Reinsch Tests
Bronze alloy
Lead alloy
Medicinal uses
Syphilis, yaws, psoriasis, and other viruses
Industrial uses
Ammunition production, pigments, insecticides, rat
poison, wood preservative, semiconductors, & others
10. Guideline value for Arsenic contamination
WHO (1993) permissible limit for drinking purpose- 0.01 mg/L
Permissible limit in absence of alternate source- 0.05 mg/L4
Proposal by WHO in 2001- 0.001 mg/L
PMTDI inorganic As- 0.002 mg/kg of body wt.(JECFA, 1983)
PTWI inorganic As- 0.015 mg/kg of body wt.(FAO/WHO, 1989)
12. Extent of ground water contamination with Arsenic,
India (1/2)
State Affected Districts (As > 0.05 mg/dl)
West Bengal3 12 districts ( Murshidabad, Maldah, Nadia, N & S
24 parganas, Burdwan, Howrah, Hooghly, Kolkata,
Coochbehar, N. Dinajpur & S. Dinajpur), 111 Blocks
Bihar2 13 Districts (Begusarai, Bhagalpur, Bhojpur, Buxar,
Darbhanga, Katihar, Khagaria, Lakhisarai, Munger,
Patna, Samastipur, Saran, Vaishali), 50 Blocks
Chhattisgarh3 Ambagarh Chowki block of Rajnandgaon district
13. Extent of ground water contamination with Arsenic,
India (2/2)
State Affected Districts (As > 0.05 mg/dl)
Uttar
Pradesh3
9 Districts (Arga, Aligarh, Balia, Balrampur, Gonda,
Lakhimpur Kheri, Gorakhpur, Mathura,
Moradabad), 32 Blocks
Jharkhand3 3 blocks of Sahebganj district
Assam3 27 villages of Dhemaji & Karimganj
Manipur3 Thumbil & Imphal district
14. Related research (1/8)
Description of Arsenic ground water contaminated
areas of India and effects of Arsenic contaminated
drinking water on human biological system- In India,
seven states namely, West-Bengal, Jharkhand, Bihar,
Uttar Pradesh in the flood plain of Ganga River; Assam
and Manipur in the flood plain of Brahamaputra and
Imphal rivers and Rajnandgaon village in Chhattisgarh
state have so far been reported affected by arsenic
contamination in groundwater above the permissible
limit of 50 µg/L. 5
15. Related research (2/8)
Description of Arsenic ground water contaminated
area of Rajnandgaon District, Madhya Pradesh
(Now it comes under Chhattisgarh). Arsenic
calamity in West Bengal was known during 19708-
80 and officially documented by K.C.Saha from
School of tropical Medicine Calcutta, 1983. Though
skin lesions in Koudikasa villagers were noticed in
early seventies, there were officially confirmed to
be due to Arsenic toxicity only 6 months ago. 7
16. Related research (3/8)
Arsenic exposure in drinking water and mortality from Cardio-
vascular disease in Bangladesh: prospective cohort study. There
is a dose-response relationship in Arsenic and cardiovascular
disease, specially heart disease (at a much lower level of
exposure than previously reported). There is also synergistic
effect with cigarate smoking to ischemic heart disease 11
Description of ground water contamination in Bangladesh 12
Arsenic in Groundwater: A Summary of Sources and the
Biogeochemical and Hydrogeologic Factors Affecting Arsenic
Occurrence and Mobility 13
17. Related research (4/8)
Arsenic contamination of ground water and its impact on
population of District of Nadia, West Bengal India 8
Ground water Arsenic contamination in Bangladesh and West
Bengal, India. Describe the affected area of Ganga-Brahmaputra-
Meghna basin that comes under Bangladesh and west Bengal,
India 9
Low-level environmental arsenic exposure correlates with
unexplained male infertility risk. Higher Asi
V levels were more
likely to exhibit UMI with increasing adjusted odds ratios14
18. Related research (5/8)
Exposed individuals are at higher risk of developing
liver and cardiovascular disease, as indicated by
elevated serum levels of liver injury biomarkers
and inflammatory cytokines. Increase of
autoimmune markers in the serum suggests that
arsenic exposure also induces autoimmune
diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis. Both
rheumatoid arthritis and liver disease are risk
factors for cardiovascular disease.6
19. Related research (6/8)
Low doses of arsenic exposure mitigate or mask
p53 function and further perturb intracellular redox
state, which triggers persistent endoplasmic
reticulum (ER) stress and activates UPR (unfolded
protein response), leading to transformation or
tumorigenesis. Thus, the results suggest that low
doses of arsenic exposure, through attenuating p53-
regulated tumor suppressive function, change the
state of intracellular redox and create a
microenvironment for tumorigenesis. 15
20. Related research (7/8)
Arsenic exposure and risk of preeclampsia in a
Mexican mestizo population- Exposure
to arsenic in drinking water has been associated
with various complications of pregnancy including
fetal loss, low birth weight, anemia, gestational
diabetes and spontaneous abortion. The study
showed for the first time that at these lower levels
of exposure there is no association with
preeclampsia. 16
21. Related research (8/8)
Arsenic in Drinking Water and Lung Cancer Mortality in the United
States: An Analysis Based on US Counties and 30 Years of
Observation (1950-1979)- Cancer risks (slopes) were found to be
indistinguishable from zero for males and females. The addition
of arsenic level did not significantly increase the explanatory power of
the models. Stratified, or categorical, analysis yielded relative risks
that hover about 1.00. The unit risk estimates were nonpositive and
not significantly different from zero, and the maximum (95% UCL) unit
risk estimates for lung cancer were lower than those in US EPA (2010).
Conclusions. These results are consistent with a recent metaregression
that indicated no increased lung cancer risk for arsenic exposures
below 100-150 µg/L. 17
22. Remedial measures for Arsenic removal from
water20 - Methods
Oxidation
Coagulation, precipitation and filtration
Adsorption (Sorptive filtration)
Ion exchange
Membrane technologies
23. Remedial measures: Oxidation
Effective for removal of pentavalent Arsenic or Arsenate
as trivalent As (Arsenate) not charged below pH 9.2
Oxidation converts Arsenite to Arsenate
Used agents: Oxygen(O2), Hypochlorite (HClO),
Permanganate (HMnO4) and Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)
Air oxidation preferred- slow process, low cost
Can be catalysed by bacteria, strong acid or alkali
solution, Copper, powdered activate Carbone, high
temperature
24. Remedial measures: Coagulation, precipitation and
filtration
Done by metal salt and lime
3 steps:
Precipitation-by formation of insoluble compound
Co-precipitation- Incorporation of soluble Arsenic
species into growing metal hydroxide phases (using
Fe3+)
Adsorption: Electrostatic binding of soluble Arsenic
to external surfaces of the insoluble metal
hydroxide
25. Remedial measures: Coagulation, precipitation and
filtration
1st used for drinking water in 1970 in northern Chile:
reduce from 400 µg/L to 10 µg/L at the rate of 500 L/sec
(pH, oxidizing and coagulating agents are in strict control)
Coagulation & flocculation
Process use Alarm(pH 6-8), ferric chloride(pH <8) or ferric
sulfate
Removal done by sedimentation followed by filtration
26. Remedial measures: Coagulation, precipitation and
filtration
Bucket treatment unit
20 lit two bucket placed one above other
Aluminum, sulphate, potassium permanganate powder
mixed with water in upper bucket & stirred for 30-60 secs
Water then allowed to flow from upper to lower bucket by a
plastic tube via sand filter installed in lower bucket
Stevens Institute Technology
Chemical used: Iron sulphate & Calcium hypochlorite
flocs separation: sedimentation followed by filtration
28. Remedial measures: Use of naturally occurring iron in
ground water
No chemical added
Dissolved Iron oxidized and precipitated –with arsenic
This method use- oxidation, coagulation, adsorption,
sedimentation and filtration
Increasing contact time helps this method
Depends on iron and arsenic contents of water
29. Remedial measures: Coagulation with lime
Chemical used: Quick lime (CaO) or hydrated lime [Ca(OH)2]
Process: similar like metal slat process of coagulation
Calcium hydroxide acts as a sorptive flocculant for arsenic
Excess lime and precipitate removed: sedimentation & filtration
Works in pH 10.6-11.4
Removes 40-70% arsenic
Better to use pre-treatment process for alum & iron coagulation
30. Remedial measures: Solar oxidation & precipitation of
Iron(III) with adsorbed Arsenic(V) [SORAS]
Photochemical oxidation: Irradiation of water in PET or
other UV-A transparent bottle- coverts As(III) to As(V)
Precipitation or filtration of adsorbed As(V) on Fe(III)-
oxides [Fe naturally present or added]
A household method where ground water naturally
contains Fe(II) and Fe(III)
32. Remedial measures: Adsorption (Sorptive
filtration) using activated alumina [Al2O3]
Good sorptive surface: 200-300 m2/gm
water passed through packed column of
alumina- impurities and As retaians
Caustic soda (NaOH) used to regenerate
saturated packed column of alumina
Example: BUET Activated Alumina, Alcan
Enhanced Activate Alumina, Apyron Arsenic
Treatment Unit
33. Remedial measures: Adsorption (Sorptive
filtration) using Granular Ferric hydroxide
Used for removal of Arsenate, Arsenite and
phosphate from water
Water pass through adsorption bed containing
granular ferric hydroxide
Operates like conventional filter with downward
water movement
Water containing high dissolved iron and
suspended matters- to be aerated and filtered by
sand/gravel filter as pre-treatment process to
prevent clogging of adsorption bed
34. Remedial measures: Adsorption (Sorptive
filtration) using Hydrous Cerium Oxide
Has good adsorbent surface
Laboratory and field level testing done in
different sites
Method: Same as granular ferric oxide method
Highly efficient in removal Arsenic from ground
water
35. Remedial measures: Adsorption (Sorptive
filtration) using Iron coated sand and brick chips
Iron coated sand and ferrous sulphate coated
brick chips used
Water of contaminate well or other source
allowed to pass though a filter with a
underneath drainage system
May be used at school level or institutional
level or village level
36. Household level Arsenic filters
Water allowed to pass through partly oxidized zero
valent iron, sand, brick chips and wood cake
Combination of slow sand filtration and
adsorption on iron hydroxide- Typical biosand
filter(sand & gravel) with an extra open chamber on
top containing iron nails
Iron oxidized to Ferrous hydroxide in presence of air
and water
Surface complexation reaction occur- arsenic rapidly
trapped onto the surface of Fe(OH)2
37. Remedial measures: Ion exchange
Similar to activated alumina
Medium- synthetic resin of better defined ion
exchange capacity
Less dependent of water pH
Requires oxidation process as a pre-step
Resin become exhausted after some time- can
be recharged by washing with Sodium chloride
(NaCl) solution
38. Remedial measures: Membrane technologies
Two type of membrane-
low-pressure membrane: microfiltration and
ultrafiltration
High-pressure membrane: nanofiltration and reverse
osmosis
Independent of pH and other solutes.
Affected by presence of colloids
Pre-treatment of suspended material and colloids
are required
Membrane can not be backwashed
39. Remedial measures: Sludge disposal
All Arsenic removal technology generates high
concentrated sorption media, sludge or liquid
media
Bio-methylation by fresh cow dung21
Blending of contaminated waste with brick,
cement or concrete
40. Remedial measures
Chemical controls on abiotic and biotic release of
geogenic arsenic from Pleistocene aquifer sediments to
groundwater- The mode of As release was impacted by the
source of DOC supplied to the sediments, with biological
processes responsible for 81% to 85% of the total As release
following incubations with lactate and acetate but only up to
43% to 61% of the total As release following incubations with
humic and fulvic acids. Overall, cycling of key redox-active
elements and organic-carbon reactivity govern the potential
for geogenic As release to groundwater, and results here may
be used to formulate better predictions of the arsenic
pollution potential of aquifers in South and Southeast Asia. 18
41. Remedial measures
Pilot study on arsenic removal from groundwater using a
small-scale reverse osmosis system- Towards
sustainable drinking water production.
The arsenic removal efficiency for aerated and non-aerated
groundwater by reverse osmosis technology in combination
with an energy-saving recovery system have been studied.
It works on reverse osmosis principle. Total arsenic removal
efficiency was around 99% and the arsenic concentration in
permeate was in compliance with the WHO and National
Indian Standard of 10μg/L but not occur under anoxic
conditions with non-aerated groundwater. Re-injection of
reject water underground may offer a safe disposal
option.19
42. Remedial measures : Bacterial method
Biotransformation and bioaccumulation of
Arsenic by Brevibacillus brevis isolated from
Arsenic contaminated region of West Bengal
This bacteria is well adopted to arsenite and
can also transform arsenite to less toxic
arsenate 10
44. References (2/3)
8. Guah Mazumdar et. al. , Indian J Community Med. 2010 April: 35(2):351-388,
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2940197
9. Chowdhury et. al. Environmental Health Perspective, Vol. 108, No. 5, May 2000,
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1638054/pdf/envhper00306-0043.pdf
10. Banerjee et. al., IOSR Journal of Environmental Science, Toxicology and Food Technology (IOSR-
JESTFT), e-ISSN: 2319-2402, p-ISSN: 2319-2399, Volume 3, Issue 1, (Jan. to Feb. 2013), PP 01-10,
http://shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/105505/15/15_publications.pdf
11. Chen et. al., BKJ 2011, 342:d2431, http://www.bmj.com/content/bmj/342/bmj.d2431.full.pdf
12. Safiudiin et. al., http://eng-consult.com/pub/ArsenicIEB.pdf
13. Barringer J. and Reilly P. A., INTECH, http://cdn.intechopen.com/pdfs-wm/42035.pdf
14. Wang X et. al. Science of The Total Environment, Volume 571, 15 November 2016, Pages 307–
313, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27485131
15. Ganapathy S. et al., Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology Volume 306, 1 September 2016,
Pages 98–104
45. References (3/3)
16. Sandoval-Carrillo A et. al. BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2016; 16: 153. ,
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4940694/
17. Ferdosi H et. al. , J Environ Public Health. 2016;2016:1602929. doi: 10.1155/2016/1602929.
Epub 2016 Jun 13. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4921645/pdf/JEPH2016-
1602929.pdf
18. Gillispie Elizabeth C., Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts Issue 8, 2016
19. Schmidt SA. Et. al. Journal of Hazardous Materials Volume 318, 15 November 2016, Pages 671–
678
20. Arsenic removal Technologies by Raju Shrestha, Environment and Public Health Organisation,
ENPHO, Dorothee Spuhler, Published in www.sswm.info
21. Ali et. al. (2001) Department of Low cost Technology for Removal of Arsenic, Dhaka,
Bangladesh