CUET DIGITAL REPOSITORY

QUALITATIVE ASSESSMENT OF JAR AND BOTTLED WATER AVAILABLE IN CHATTOGRAM CITY CORPORATION AREA FOR DRINKING PURPOSE

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dc.contributor.author Bhanja, Subrata
dc.date.accessioned 2025-09-09T05:45:08Z
dc.date.available 2025-09-09T05:45:08Z
dc.date.issued 2023-07-26
dc.identifier.uri http://103.99.128.19:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/468
dc.description An M.Sc. Thesis from the Department of Chemistry en_US
dc.description.abstract Most of the common diseases observed in developing countries are due to drinking contaminated water. Clean and safe drinking water is essential for human life. It is generally considered that bottled and jar water is safe for human consumption. The present study was conducted to know whether the bottled and jar water sold in the Chattogram City Corporation area is safe for public health. To fulfil the objective, twenty (20) drinking jar water samples were collected from ten different populated spots, which are supplied by the local small water purification plants. Samples of ten (10) different brands of bottled water were also collected from the retail grocery store. Some physico-chemical properties, like pH, total dissolved solid (TDS), electrical conductivity (EC) and the concentration of seven heavy metals (Cd, Cr, Cu, Fe, Mn, Pb and Zn), were determined. Microbial content including total bacteria count (TBC) and total coliform count (TCC) were also evaluated. The pH value of jar and bottled water samples were within the WHO, EC, USEPA, BSTI and BIS acceptable limits. The TDS values were found to be very low in most samples, proving that the supplied drinking water did not conform to the taste standards. Only two jar water samples exceeded the electrical conductivity limit. This result confirms that the tested samples contain the required minerals for drinking water. The average TDS and EC values of jar water samples were higher than those of bottled water, which indicates lower mineral content in bottled water. To assess the heavy metal content in drinking water, seven heavy metals in tested bottle and jar water samples were investigated. Among all seven heavy metals, only copper (Cu) was detected in all jar and bottled water samples which was below the WHO, EC, USEPA, BSTI and BIS recommended value. The heavy metal, manganese (Mn) was detected in three jar water samples, while iron (Fe) was found only in one, which were much below the acceptable limit recommended by WHO, EC, USEPA, BSTI and BIS. In the context of microbial contamination, 40% of total jar water samples and 33.3% of bottled water samples were found contaminated by pathogenic micro-organisms in terms of total bacteria count, while no coliform bacteria were detected in any tested sample. This microbial data is giving us a worrying signal about drinking jars and bottled water marketed in Chattogram city. en_US
dc.description.sponsorship None en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher CUET en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries ;TCD-14
dc.subject Drinking Water Safety en_US
dc.subject Water Contamination en_US
dc.subject Public Health Risk en_US
dc.subject Microbial Contamination en_US
dc.subject Clean and Safe Drinking Water en_US
dc.subject Heavy Metal Comparison en_US
dc.subject TDS and EC Differences en_US
dc.title QUALITATIVE ASSESSMENT OF JAR AND BOTTLED WATER AVAILABLE IN CHATTOGRAM CITY CORPORATION AREA FOR DRINKING PURPOSE en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US


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