Ecological and human health risk assessment of metals leached from end-of-life solar photovoltaics

Preeti Nain, Arun Kumar

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47 Scopus citations

Abstract

Photovoltaic industry has shown tremendous growth among renewable energy sector. Though, this high installation rate will eventually result in generation of large volume of end-of-life photovoltaic waste with hazardous metals. In present study, reported leached metal contents from different photovoltaics in previous investigations were utilized for (i) potential fate and transport analysis to soil and groundwater and, (ii) estimating ecological and human health risks via dermal and ingestion pathways for child and adult sub-populations. The results indicate that the children are at highest risk, mainly due to lead (hazard quotient from 1.2 to 2.6). Metals, such as cadmium, lead, indium, molybdenum and tellurium pose maximum risks for child and adult sub-populations via soil-dermal pathway followed by soil-ingestion pathway. This is further proved by calculated high values of contamination factor and geo-accumulation index for cadmium (102.4), indium (238.9) and molybdenum (16.12). The estimated soil contamination is significant with respect to aluminium, silver, cadmium, iron, lead, however, groundwater contamination was insignificant. Exposure to polluted soils yields an aggregate hazard index (for non-cancer effects) > 1 for all four pathways, with soil dermal pathway as the major contributor. Lead poses significant cancer risk for all scenarios (average risk: 0.0098 to 0.047 (soil) and 2.1 × 10−5 to 3.5 × 10−5 (groundwater)), whereas acceptable non-cancer risk was observed for other metals from groundwater exposure. Further, variance contribution and spearman correlation coefficient analysis show that metal concentration, exposure frequency and ingestion rate are the main contributors towards overall uncertainty in risk estimates. More detailed assessment for environmentally-sensitive metals should be carried out by considering other field breakage scenarios also, although the assessment suggests low risk for majority of metals examined.

Original languageEnglish
Article number115393
JournalEnvironmental Pollution
Volume267
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2020
Externally publishedYes

Funding

The authors would also like to thank Indian Institute of Technology (IIT Delhi), India and University Grant Commission (UGC award Sr. No. 24004768 Ref. No: 3509/NET-JULY2016) for providing financial support for this study. The authors would also like to thank Indian Institute of Technology ( IIT Delhi ), India and University Grant Commission ( UGC award Sr. No. 24004768 Ref. No: 3509/NET-JULY2016 ) for providing financial support for this study.

FundersFunder number
IIT Delhi ), India and University Grant Commission
IIT Delhi), India and University Grant Commission
University Grants Committee24004768, 3509/NET-JULY2016
Indian Institute of Technology Delhi

    Keywords

    • Ecological risk
    • End-of-life solar photovoltaic
    • Heavy metal leaching
    • Human health risk assessment
    • Monte Carlo

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