[Distribution, Sources, and Health Risk Assessment of PAHs in Water Supply Source Regions of Guangzhou].
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Trace polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in drinking water sources have significant harmful effects on human health. Water and sediment samples from water source regions of three water treatment plants in Guangzhou were collected and the distributions of 16 kinds of PAHs were analyzed. The human risk of PAHs in the water samples was also evaluated using the Risk Assessment Guidance for Superfund (RAGS) of the United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA). The results showed that PAHs in the samples from the three water source regions did not exceed the corresponding standard limit for water quality, and the content of ΣPAHs in suspended solids and sediments was below the medium level. The non-carcinogenic risks (HQ and HI) of PAHs in the water samples were less than 1, and the non-carcinogenic risk was negligible. In addition, Riskingest, Riskdermal, and RiskT for the waters were all in range of 5.53×10-7 to 5.34×10-6, indicating that a carcinogen risk was possible but acceptable. The results of the isomer ratio method indicated that the PAHs in the water sources of the three water plants had a mixed input of pollution, including petroleum discharge, petroleum combustion, and incomplete combustion of wood, coal, and biomass. The total organic carbon (TOC) content of the water and sediment samples was positively correlated with the accumulation and enrichment of low-ring PAHs, and there was a significant positive correlation between PAHs and similar molecules in the sediments. The ΣPAHs in the water and sediment samples were also strongly correlated.