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      Environmental Safety of the Use of Major Surfactant Classes in North America

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          Abstract

          This paper brings together over 250 published and unpublished studies on the environmental properties, fate, and toxicity of the four major, high-volume surfactant classes and relevant feedstocks. The surfactants and feedstocks covered include alcohol sulfate or alcohol sulfate (AS), alcohol ethoxysulfate (AES), linear alkylbenzene sulfonate (LAS), alcohol ethoxylate (AE), and long-chain alcohol (LCOH). These chemicals are used in a wide range of personal care and cleaning products. To date, this is the most comprehensive report on these substance's chemical structures, use, and volume information, physical/chemical properties, environmental fate properties such as biodegradation and sorption, monitoring studies through sewers, wastewater treatment plants and eventual release to the environment, aquatic and sediment toxicity, and bioaccumulation information. These data are used to illustrate the process for conducting both prospective and retrospective risk assessments for large-volume chemicals and categories of chemicals with wide dispersive use. Prospective risk assessments of AS, AES, AE, LAS, and LCOH demonstrate that these substances, although used in very high volume and widely released to the aquatic environment, have no adverse impact on the aquatic or sediment environments at current levels of use. The retrospective risk assessments of these same substances have clearly demonstrated that the conclusions of the prospective risk assessments are valid and confirm that these substances do not pose a risk to the aquatic or sediment environments. This paper also highlights the many years of research that the surfactant and cleaning products industry has supported, as part of their environmental sustainability commitment, to improve environmental tools, approaches, and develop innovative methods appropriate to address environmental properties of personal care and cleaning product chemicals, many of which have become approved international standard methods.

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          Most cited references278

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          Measuring and Estimating the Bioconcentration Factor of Chemicals in Fish

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            The biodegradation of surfactants in the environment

            The possible contamination of the environment by surfactants arising from the widespread use of detergent formulations has been reviewed. Two of the major surfactants in current use are the linear alkylbenzene sulphonates (LAS) and the alkyl phenol ethoxylates (APE). These pass into the sewage treatment plants where they are partially aerobically degraded and partially adsorbed to sewage sludge that is applied to land. The biodegradation of these and a range of other surfactants both in wastewater treatment plants and after discharge into natural waters and application to land resulting in sewage sludge amended soils has been considered. Although the application of sewage sludge to soil can result in surfactant levels generally in a range 0 to 3 mg kg(-1), in the aerobic soil environment a surfactant can undergo further degradation so that the risk to the biota in soil is very small, with margins of safety that are often at least 100. In the case of APE, while the surfactants themselves show little toxicity their breakdown products, principally nonyl and octyl phenols adsorb readily to suspended solids and are known to exhibit oestrogen-like properties, possibly linked to a decreasing male sperm count and carcinogenic effects. While there is little serious risk to the environment from commonly used anionic surfactants, cationic surfactants are known to be much more toxic and at present there is a lack of data on the degradation of cationics and their fate in the environment.
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              The prediction of the macro-invertebrate fauna of unpolluted running-water sites in Great Britain using environmental data

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Crit Rev Environ Sci Technol
                Crit Rev Environ Sci Technol
                best
                Critical Reviews in Environmental Science and Technology
                Taylor & Francis
                1064-3389
                1547-6537
                11 July 2014
                September 2014
                : 44
                : 17
                : 1893-1993
                Affiliations
                [1 ] CE 2 Consulting, LLC, Cincinnati, OH, USA
                [2 ] The Procter & Gamble Company, Mason, OH, USA
                [3 ] Shell Health Americas, Houston, TX, USA
                [4 ] University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, USA
                [5 ] Aarhus University, Roskilde, Denmark
                [6 ] American Cleaning Institute, Washington, DC, USA
                Author notes
                Address correspondence to Kathleen Stanton, American Cleaning Institute, 1331 L Street, NW, Suite 650, Washington, DC 20005, USA. E-mail: kstanton@ 123456cleaninginstitute.org

                Color versions of one or more of the figures in the article can be found online at www.tandfonline.com/best.

                Article
                10.1080/10739149.2013.803777
                4130171
                19cf0f9d-009b-4edb-997c-606656c3b4b9
                © Christina Cowan-Ellsberry, Scott Belanger, Philip Dorn, Scott Dyer, Drew McAvoy, Hans Sanderson, Donald Versteeg, Darci Ferrer, and Kathleen Stanton

                This is an open access article distributed under the Supplemental Terms and Conditions for iOpenAccess articles published in Taylor & Francis journals , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                Categories
                Research Article

                General environmental science
                ecotoxicity,environmental exposure,risk assessment
                General environmental science
                ecotoxicity, environmental exposure, risk assessment

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