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Evaluating Anthropogenic Origin of Unknown Chemical Compounds in the River Rhine
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  • Yangwei Ying,
  • Geert van Kollenburg,
  • Sanne Brekelmans,
  • André van den Doel,
  • Hong Zhou,
  • Gerard Stroomberg,
  • Jeroen J. Jansen
Yangwei Ying
Zhejiang University
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Geert van Kollenburg
Radboud Universiteit

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Sanne Brekelmans
Hogeschool Leiden
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André van den Doel
Radboud Universiteit
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Hong Zhou
Zhejiang University
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Gerard Stroomberg
Radboud Universiteit
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Jeroen J. Jansen
Radboud Universiteit
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Abstract

Surface water of rivers like the Rhine is a highly relevant environmental and logistic compartment and an important source of the Dutch drinking water. To improve protection of the environment and drinking water supply, it is important to have a continuous overview of the chemical composition of the river. Such an overview may be obtained with contemporary, untargeted analytical platforms like Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS). Interpretation of such untargeted data is however challenged by the presence of many compounds of biological origin. We have developed a novel approach to screen for anthropogenic compounds using statistical tests on the time-trends of ions that are not (yet) chemically identified. This approach filters out many naturally occurring compounds, leaving more resources available for wet-lab identification of anthropogenic compounds).
Jul 2022Published in Water, Air, & Soil Pollution volume 233 issue 7. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11270-022-05713-7