Initial phthalates fingerprint and hydrochemical signature as key factors controlling phthalates concentration trends in PET-bottled waters during long storage times
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Abstract
Phthalate acid esters (PAEs) concentration in bottled water and different factors (water pH, storage time, sunlight
exposure, and temperature) that affect/control them have become hot topics during recent years. Nevertheless,
quite contradictory results and disagreements on the effects of these factors have been published. In an
attempt to find some consensus on this topic, a comprehensive study considering the combined effect of long
storage times (longer than a year) and the water hydrochemical signature (including water pH, elemental
composition and the presence/absence of dissolved CO2) was performed using the four most commonly
consumed bottled water brands on the Chilean market. Each water brand was analyzed between 10 or 14
different times, depending on the brand (in total 97 samples were studied).
Following the concept of the hydrochemical signature typically used in hydrogeology to classify types of
waters, the notion of a water phthalate fingerprint was proposed. Finally, concerning the effect of long storage
times, this study demonstrates that all the trends (increase, decrease or steady) of the Total PAEs concentration
are possible; and these trends are controlled by the specific hydrochemical signature and phthalate fingerprint of
the bottled water.
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Bibliographic citation
Becerra-Herrera, M., Arismendi, D., Molina-Balmaceda, A., Uslar, J., Manzo, V., Richter, P., & Caraballo, M. A. (2022). Initial phthalates fingerprint and hydrochemical signature as key factors controlling phthalates concentration trends in PET-bottled waters during long storage times. In Food Chemistry (Vol. 372, p. 131248). Elsevier BV. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodchem.2021.131248












