In the study, published in the journal Science Thursday, researchers detected the compound, called chloronitramide anion, in 40 drinking water samples from 10 U.S. drinking water systems using ...
Here's what we know about the drinking water chemical. What is chloronitramide anion, the chemical found in U.S. drinking ...
Chloronitramide anion, a newly identified by-product of chloramine use in water disinfection, raises concerns due to its ...
Millions of Americans may be exposed to an unregulated and potentially hazardous chemical in their drinking water, according ...
Therefore, future research on chloronitramide anion is needed to understand its potential implications in drinking water.” Water expert Dr. David Sedlak called the research a “fascinating ...
"A major goal of our work is to identify these chemicals and the reaction pathways through which they form," said Julian ...
Many public water systems in the United States use inorganic chloramines to disinfect drinking water, but their decomposition products have long been a mystery. In a new study, researchers report the ...
Despite the identification of a new chemical and the presence of an old chemical, fluoride, in drinking water, experts said most tap water is safe to drink ...
A chemical byproduct found in some treated drinking water in the U.S. that remained ... have named the byproduct chloronitramide anion, and believe it is a decomposition byproduct of chloramine ...
For over a century, public water systems have used chemical compounds to kill pathogens that cause waterborne diseases such ...
The latest is a study that has detected a previously unidentified chemical byproduct in drinking water. The substance, called ...
Chloronitramide anion is a byproduct of the decomposition of chloramine, which is used by treatment plants to disinfect drinking water and kill diseases like cholera and typhoid fever. After ...