Measurement of protein-like fluorescence in river and waste water using a handheld spectrophotometer

Andrew Baker, D Ward, SH Lieten, R Periera, EC Simpson, M Slater

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle

90 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Protein-like fluorescence intensity in rivers increases with increasing anthropogenic DOM inputs from sewerage and farm wastes. Here, a portable luminescence spectrophotometer was used to investigate if this technology could be used to provide both field scientists with a rapid pollution monitoring tool and process control engineers with a portable waste water monitoring device, through the measurement of river and waste water tryptophan-like fluorescence from a range of rivers in NE England and from effluents from within two waste water treatment plants. The portable spectrophotometer determined that waste waters and sewerage effluents had the highest tryptophan-like fluorescence intensity, urban streams had an intermediate tryptophan-like fluorescence intensity, and the upstream river samples of good water quality the lowest tryptophan-like fluorescence intensity. Replicate samples demonstrated that fluorescence intensity is reproducible to +/- 20% for low fluorescence, 'clean' river water samples and +/- 5% for urban water and waste waters. Correlations between fluorescence measured by the portable spectrophotometer with a conventional bench machine were 0.91; (Spearman's rho, n = 143), demonstrating that the portable spectrophotometer does correlate with tryptophan-like fluorescence intensity measured using the bench spectrophotometer.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2934-2938
Number of pages5
JournalWater Research
Volume38
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2004

Keywords

  • spectrophotometry
  • luminescence
  • sewage
  • fluorescence
  • waste water
  • river water quality

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