Characterization of dissolved organic carbon in shallow groundwater of chronic kidney disease affected regions in Sri Lanka

2019 
Abstract Number of Chronic Kidney Disease patients with no identifiable cause (Chronic Kidney Disease Unknown Aetiology, CKDu) are escalating in the North Central Province (NCP) of Sri Lanka. This study examined distribution of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in shallow groundwater of three CKDu risk zones (high risk, HR; low risk, LR and no risk, NR) and a control zone (CR) from wet to dry seasons. The interactions of DOC with calcium and magnesium ions and metabolites of selected pesticides were also examined. The lowest COD Mn DOC values of 0.60 ± 0.19, 0.58 ± 0.17 were reported in the DOC of the HR water in the wet and dry seasons, respectively, and this DOC fraction encompasses organic compounds with the lowest labile C with the highest aromaticity. Four distinct fluorescence DOC fractions in the HR water were identified with fulvic acid component associated as dominant non–labile C fraction. The essential building blocks of non–labile C were concentrated into molecular weight (MW) fraction II (900–1800 Da). The DOC source in all groundwater was identified as autochthonous (fluorescence index > 1.8). In the HR water, pentachlorophenol (PCP) was also detected in appreciable quantities. The factor loadings based on principal component analysis (PCA) showed a positive correlation between DOC and sulfate, calcium, total iron, PCP in the HR groundwater. Accordingly, it can be inferred that divalent cations (Ca 2+ , Mg 2+ ) abundant in the HR groundwater interact with phenolate and carboxylate functional groups in DOC at alkaline pH.
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