Analysis of Drinking water sample was carried out to develop a data base on the quality of water being consumed in different sites of Gimbi town. Composite Drinking water samples, total of 20x3 = 60 were collected from five sites of the town. Preservation of water samples were done by adding 2 drops of concentrated HNO3 and 1 ml of 10 % NaOH prior to sampling to each water sample for heavy metal and Phenol analysis respectively before storage below 4 °C until analyzed. The samples were digested using HNO3 for heavy metal analysis. Water samples were distilled using simple distillation and distillate was collected for Phenol analysis. Parameters Temperature, Conductivity, Total dissolved solids (TDS), pH, and Heavy metals, Cr (VI), Cu (II), Cd (II); Pb (II), Zn (II), and Phenol were analyzed using AAS and UV-Vis Spectrophotometer. All samples contain Lead (II), Cadmium (II), Chromium (VI), Copper (II), Zinc (II) and Phenol, within acceptable limits recommended by WHO. The concentration of Metal ions and Phenol in the analyzed water samples are found in the Range: Lead (II) (0.34 μg/l - 0.78 μg/l), Chromium (VI) (0.3 μg/l - 0.52 μg/l), Cadmium (II) (0.3 μg/l - 0.62 μg/l), Copper (II) (0.32 μg/l - 0.97 μg/l), Zinc (II) (0.31 μg/l - 0.92 μg/l) and Phenol (0.3 μg/l – 0.99 μg/l).
Published in | American Journal of Physical Chemistry (Volume 12, Issue 4) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.ajpc.20231204.11 |
Page(s) | 48-54 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Heavy Metal Ions, Phenol, Analysis, Atomic Absorption Spectrometry, UV-Visible Spectrophotometry
[1] | M. Soylak, 2017. Chemical Contaminants in drinking water: Erciyes Universities; Yayin, 104, 94-98. |
[2] | Hathi M. V., Patel A. D. & Parmar K. C., Acharya G. D., 2019. Chemical properties of groundwater in Bailoda Taluka region, north Gujarat, India. |
[3] | H. M. Hassan, Mustafa H. T.; 2019. Pb and Cr concentrations in the potable water of the eastern province of Saudi Arabia: Bull. Environ. Contam. Toxicol. 43, 529. |
[4] | Environmental Protection Agency, U. S. Method, 2018. Dissolved Hexavalent Chromium Determination in Drinking Water, Groundwater, and Industrial Wastewater Effluents by Ion Chromatography. 218.6. 45-54. |
[5] | International Organization for Standardization; 2016. Water quality determination of cobalt, nickel, copper, zinc, cadmium and lead. Geneva, 8288: 1986. |
[6] | Dionex Corporation, 2020. Determination of Cr (VI) in Water, Waste Water, and Solid Waste Extracts. 345-349. |
[7] | Ballinger G. D., 2018. Methods for Chemical analysis of water and wastes: EPA, Ohio, 78-87. |
[8] | Vennilamani S., Pattabhi K., Kadirvelu M. C., Karthika M.; Radhika N., 2017. Agricultural byproduct as metal adsorbent: Environmental Technology. 21 (10), 1091-10977. |
[9] | Stuewer D., & Broekaert J. A. C., Barnowski C., Jakubowski N., 2018. Speciation of chromium by direct coupling of ion exchange chromatography with ICP-MS. At. Spectrom, 1155 (12), 1155–1161. doi: 10.1039/a702120h. |
[10] | WHO Guidelines for drinking water quality, 2009. World Health Organization (WHO). |
[11] | Johansen V. C. & Hills L. M. 2017. Hexavalent Chromium in Cement Manufacturing: Literature Review, Portland cement Association, Skokie, IL; |
[12] | Toomuluri P. J. & Eckert Jr., J. O., Guo Q., 2018. Leachability of Regulated Metals from Cement-Mortar Linings. Journal AWWA, 90 (3), 62. |
[13] | Q. Guo, 2017. Increases of Lead and Chromium in Drinking Water from Using Cement-Mortar Lined Pipes: Initial Modeling and Assessment. Journal of Hazardous Materials, 56 (1-2), 181. |
[14] | A. H. Tuthill, 2021. Stainless Steel Piping. Journal AWWA, 86 (6), 67. |
[15] | Delidou K., Dermosonoglou D., Gregoriadou A., Tsoumparis P., Edipidi C & Katsougiann opoulos B., 2020. Heavy metals in drinking water in Thessaloniki area, Greece. Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Environmental Science and technology, Aristotle University, Ermoupolis. |
[16] | A. Farag, Eweida A., 2020. Heavy metals in drinking water and their environmental impact on human health. International Conference on Environmental Hazards Mitigation, Cairo University, Egypt, pp. 542-556. |
[17] | Prasai T., Singh A. & Yami K. D., Jayana B. L., 2019. Assessment of drinking water quality of madhyapurthimi and study of antibiotic sensitivity against bacterial isolates. Nepal Journal of Science and Technology, 10: 167-172. |
[18] | Mosley M., Singh S.,2020. Trace metal levels in drinking water on Viti Levu, Fiji Islands S.pac.J.Nat.Sci. |
[19] | Shubhashish K., Pandey & R. Pandey J., 2018. Heavy metal contamination of Ganga river at Varanasi in relation to atmospheric deposition. Tropical Ecology, 51 (2): 365-373. |
[20] | Kaghazchi T., Soleimani M., Tajar A. F., 2019. Adsorption of Cadmium from aqueous solutions on Sulfurized Activated Carbon prepared from Nut Shells: Journal of Hazardous Materials. 165, 159-1164. |
[21] | Toskovic D. V., Pantelic G. K., Ristic N. M & Jovanic S. Rajkovic M. B., Lacnjevac C. M., Ralevic N. R., Stojanovic M. D., 2021. Identification of metals (Heavy and Radioactive) in drinking water by indirect analysis method based on scale tests. Sensors, 8: 2188-2207. |
[22] | Danamark.com., 2018.Heavy metals in drinking water, viewed August1, 2010, http://www.danamark.com/Heavymetals in drinking water/pdf. |
[23] | Tahawy M., Nassef M., Hannigan R., 2020. Determination of some Heavy metals in the environment of Sadat Industrial City. Proceeding of the 2nd Environmental Physics Conference, Cairo University, Egypt, pp. 145-152. |
[24] | Puttaiah E. T., Rajappa B., Manjappa S., 2021. Monitoring of Heavy metal concentration in Groundwater of Hakinaka Taluk, India. Contemporary Engineering Sciences, 3 (4): 183-190. |
APA Style
Shifera, L. (2023). Assessment of Quality Drinking Water in Gimbi Town, West Wollega. American Journal of Physical Chemistry, 12(4), 48-54. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajpc.20231204.11
ACS Style
Shifera, L. Assessment of Quality Drinking Water in Gimbi Town, West Wollega. Am. J. Phys. Chem. 2023, 12(4), 48-54. doi: 10.11648/j.ajpc.20231204.11
AMA Style
Shifera L. Assessment of Quality Drinking Water in Gimbi Town, West Wollega. Am J Phys Chem. 2023;12(4):48-54. doi: 10.11648/j.ajpc.20231204.11
@article{10.11648/j.ajpc.20231204.11, author = {Leta Shifera}, title = {Assessment of Quality Drinking Water in Gimbi Town, West Wollega}, journal = {American Journal of Physical Chemistry}, volume = {12}, number = {4}, pages = {48-54}, doi = {10.11648/j.ajpc.20231204.11}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajpc.20231204.11}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ajpc.20231204.11}, abstract = {Analysis of Drinking water sample was carried out to develop a data base on the quality of water being consumed in different sites of Gimbi town. Composite Drinking water samples, total of 20x3 = 60 were collected from five sites of the town. Preservation of water samples were done by adding 2 drops of concentrated HNO3 and 1 ml of 10 % NaOH prior to sampling to each water sample for heavy metal and Phenol analysis respectively before storage below 4 °C until analyzed. The samples were digested using HNO3 for heavy metal analysis. Water samples were distilled using simple distillation and distillate was collected for Phenol analysis. Parameters Temperature, Conductivity, Total dissolved solids (TDS), pH, and Heavy metals, Cr (VI), Cu (II), Cd (II); Pb (II), Zn (II), and Phenol were analyzed using AAS and UV-Vis Spectrophotometer. All samples contain Lead (II), Cadmium (II), Chromium (VI), Copper (II), Zinc (II) and Phenol, within acceptable limits recommended by WHO. The concentration of Metal ions and Phenol in the analyzed water samples are found in the Range: Lead (II) (0.34 μg/l - 0.78 μg/l), Chromium (VI) (0.3 μg/l - 0.52 μg/l), Cadmium (II) (0.3 μg/l - 0.62 μg/l), Copper (II) (0.32 μg/l - 0.97 μg/l), Zinc (II) (0.31 μg/l - 0.92 μg/l) and Phenol (0.3 μg/l – 0.99 μg/l). }, year = {2023} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Assessment of Quality Drinking Water in Gimbi Town, West Wollega AU - Leta Shifera Y1 - 2023/12/28 PY - 2023 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajpc.20231204.11 DO - 10.11648/j.ajpc.20231204.11 T2 - American Journal of Physical Chemistry JF - American Journal of Physical Chemistry JO - American Journal of Physical Chemistry SP - 48 EP - 54 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2327-2449 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajpc.20231204.11 AB - Analysis of Drinking water sample was carried out to develop a data base on the quality of water being consumed in different sites of Gimbi town. Composite Drinking water samples, total of 20x3 = 60 were collected from five sites of the town. Preservation of water samples were done by adding 2 drops of concentrated HNO3 and 1 ml of 10 % NaOH prior to sampling to each water sample for heavy metal and Phenol analysis respectively before storage below 4 °C until analyzed. The samples were digested using HNO3 for heavy metal analysis. Water samples were distilled using simple distillation and distillate was collected for Phenol analysis. Parameters Temperature, Conductivity, Total dissolved solids (TDS), pH, and Heavy metals, Cr (VI), Cu (II), Cd (II); Pb (II), Zn (II), and Phenol were analyzed using AAS and UV-Vis Spectrophotometer. All samples contain Lead (II), Cadmium (II), Chromium (VI), Copper (II), Zinc (II) and Phenol, within acceptable limits recommended by WHO. The concentration of Metal ions and Phenol in the analyzed water samples are found in the Range: Lead (II) (0.34 μg/l - 0.78 μg/l), Chromium (VI) (0.3 μg/l - 0.52 μg/l), Cadmium (II) (0.3 μg/l - 0.62 μg/l), Copper (II) (0.32 μg/l - 0.97 μg/l), Zinc (II) (0.31 μg/l - 0.92 μg/l) and Phenol (0.3 μg/l – 0.99 μg/l). VL - 12 IS - 4 ER -