sexta-feira, março 24, 2006

 

Água em Recipiente Plástico

Água mineral envasada em recipientes plásticos tipo PET fica contamina, porque estes recipientes liberam continuamente o elemento químico chamado antimônio, metal pesado semelhante, em seus efeitos, ao chumbo [vide artigo abaixo]. As garrafas PET são, também, os principais recipientes dos nossos refrigerantes gasosos. Procure evitar estas embalagens e as latinhas de alumínio. Prefira embalagens de vidro, quando disponíveis.

Fique alerta, Rui.
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Chemical Science

A supplement providing a snapshot of the latest developments across the chemical sciences.



Toxic risk in bottled water?


19 January 2006

Plastic bottles continuously leach antimony into drinking water, claim geochemists in Germany.

Researchers led by Bill Shotyk at the University of Heidelberg tested waters bottled in the same region in Canada.

Water contained in polyethylene terephthalate (PET) bottles contained up to 375 ppt antimony, whereas water in polypropylene bottles contained only 8.2 ppt antimony. Three months later, the water in PET bottles contained up to 626 ppt antimony. PET is made using an antimony catalyst.

Bottled water

Shotyk’s group tested the groundwater from the same area in Canada, using ultra-sensitive ice core analysing equipment. The antimony levels they found were very low – 2 ppt. Previous reports gave an average value of 300 ppt.

‘I’m not sure how many labs out there could really measure how much antimony is in groundwater, most people have detection limits that are far above the natural values in groundwater,’ said Shotyk.

The antimony levels in the bottled water are lower than the US environmental protection agency’s maximum contamination level, set at six parts per billion. Shotyk is more concerned that antimony continuously leaches into the water. ‘My point is not that these bottled waters are contaminated with antimony,' he said, 'the point is that antimony is constantly being released from the bottle into the water.’

David Coggan, an epidemiologist from the MRC’s environmental epidemiology unit at Southampton, UK, urges caution. Shotyk’s results need further scrutiny before any health implications could be discussed, he says, partly because little is known about antimony’s toxicity. ‘It is important to think about what sort of doses people are going to get,’ said Coggan.

Nevertheless Shotyk no longer drinks water from PET bottles.



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