Abstract

In the last few decades, pharmaceuticals, credited with saving millions of lives, have emerged as a new class of environmental contaminant. These compounds can have both chronic and acute harmful effects on natural flora and fauna. The presence of pharmaceutical contaminants in ground waters, surface waters (lakes, rivers, and streams), sea water, wastewater treatment plants (influents and effluents), soils, and sludges has been well doccumented. A range of methods including oxidation, photolysis, UV-degradation, nanofiltration, reverse osmosis, and adsorption has been used for their remediation from aqueous systems. Many methods have been commercially limited by toxic sludge generation, incomplete removal, high capital and operating costs, and the need for skilled operating and maintenance personnel. Adsorption technologies are a low-cost alternative, easily used in developing countries where there is a dearth of advanced technologies, skilled personnel, and available capital, and adsorption appears to be the most broadly feasible pharmaceutical removal method. Adsorption remediation methods are easily integrated with wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). Herein, we have reviewed the literature (1990-2018) illustrating the rising environmental pharmaceutical contamination concerns as well as remediation efforts emphasizing adsorption.

Keywords

ChemistryEnvironmental chemistryBiochemical engineeringNanotechnology

MeSH Terms

AnimalsDrug TherapyEnvironmental Restoration and RemediationGroundwaterHumansPharmaceutical PreparationsWater PollutantsChemicalWater PollutionChemicalWater Purification

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Publication Info

Year
2019
Type
review
Volume
119
Issue
6
Pages
3510-3673
Citations
2287
Access
Closed

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Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

2287
OpenAlex
52
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2134
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Cite This

Manvendra Patel, Rahul Kumar, Kamal Kishor et al. (2019). Pharmaceuticals of Emerging Concern in Aquatic Systems: Chemistry, Occurrence, Effects, and Removal Methods. Chemical Reviews , 119 (6) , 3510-3673. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.chemrev.8b00299

Identifiers

DOI
10.1021/acs.chemrev.8b00299
PMID
30830758

Data Quality

Data completeness: 90%