خيارات البحث
النتائج 161 - 170 من 240
Hazardous waste site soil remediation
1994
Wilson, David J. | Clarke, Ann N.
Introduces various techniques for soil remediation, including chemical fixation/stabilization, soil vapor extraction, thermally enhanced vapor stripping, biodegradation, and air sparging. This title describes the ex shu technique of thermal desorption of soil contaminants - a low-cost alternative to incineration for the removal of organics.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Commentary Article: Regulatory advances - Guide values for contaminated sites in Baden-Wuerttemberg
1994
Trenck, K.T. von der (Landesanstalt fuer Umweltschutz Baden-Wuerttemberg, Karlsruhe (Germany)) | Ruf, J. | Flittner, M.
The treatment of hazardous sites in Baden-Wuerttemberg is based on three legal documents: the state waste disposal act (LAbfG, 1990), the assessment committee directive (Kommissions VO, 1990), and the guide values directive (UM and SM B-W, 1993). The guide values directive was commonly issued by the Ministry of Labor, Health and Social Affairs and the Ministry of the Environment of the state of Baden-Wuerttemberg (UM and SM B-W, 1993) and contains a three-level hierarchy of numerical criteria and rules which serve as both screening levels during the investigation and as remediation objectives. The decision for the appropriate level of remediation is based on feasibility and environmental balance considerations. The levels are ordered as follows: - 1. (Background-Values) On principle, all remediations have to be based first on background levels. In the case of lack of feasibility or negative environmental balance for level-1 objectives use-specific requirements are considered next. - 2. (Assessment-Values for Worst Case Exposure Conditions) The generic requirements underlying level 2 afford appropriate protection for humans regarding the most sensitive uses of the environment. At least four resources are considered on this level: Groundwater as such and its use, the health of humans on contaminated sites, and soil with respect to growth and quality of plants. Barriers against migration of the contaminants, the effect of dilution, and abandonment of certain uses, etc., are not taken into consideration on level 2. - 3. (Site-Specific Requirements) Lack of feasibility or a negative environmental balance of level-2 objectives lead to consideration of site-specific circumstances which may alleviate the requirements.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]On-line speciation of arsenical compounds in fish and mussel extracts by HPLC-ICP-MS
1994
Caroli, S. (Istituto Superiore di Sanita, Rome (Italy)) | La Torre, F. | Petrucci, F. | Violante, N.
The separation and determination of sub-micromol per litre levels of six environmentally significant As compounds was accomplished by means of high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) combined online with inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). The species of interest (arsenite and arsenate, monomethylarsonic acid, dimethylarsinic acid, arsenobetaine and arsenocholine) were quantified in fish and mussel extracts after separation on a Dionex AS7 column equipped with an on-guard AG7 column using a bicarbonate buffer as the mobile phase in a gradient mode. The species thus eluted were directly forwarded to the ICP-MS detector. The detection power of the overall system allows each As form to be determined at concentrations as low a 0.0013 - 0.0027 micromol per litre.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Immunoassay monitoring of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in the Great Lakes
1994
Richter, C.A. (Michigan State Univ., East Lansing (USA). Dept. of Fisheries and Wildlife. Pesticide Research Center. Inst. for Environmental Toxicology) | Drake, J.B. | Giesy, J.P. | Harrison, R.O.
Although polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are no longer manufactured, they are still entering the environment. In some compartments of the environment, PCB concentrations are a serious concern. This is especially true in compartments which accumulate PCBs, and in food items consumed by humans and wildlife. Also, there are situations in which management decisions require rapid, sensitive, accurate measurements, which can be made in real time under field conditions. Methods to use an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for PCBs were developed and applied to sediments and fish muscle homogenates collected from the Great Lakes. The extraction methods developed can be applied in the field with non-hazardous solvents, in the absence of sophisticated laboratory equipment. The method detection limit for PCBs in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) extracts of sediment was 0.9 mg/kg. For PCBs in isopropanol extracts of fish tissue, the method detection limit was 0.6 mg/kg. The resolution of the ELISA was 0.83 mg/kg at 1.1 mg/kg and 1.6 mg/kg at 1.7 mg/kg, for sediment and fish tissue, respectively.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Evaluation of fate and exposure models - Simulation of pesticide runoff at Rosemaund Farm (UK) using the SoilFug model
1994
Di Guardo, A. (Toronto Univ., Ontario (Canada). Inst. for Environmental Studies) | Williams, R.J. | Matthiessen, P. | Brooke, D.N. | Calamari, D.
A validation exercise of the SoilFug model using field runoff data from Rosemaund Farm (UK) is described. A comparison has been made of modelled and measured concentrations of several pesticides in surface water and soil during and after specific rain events following application. The field experiments were designed to obtain data on rainfall, outflows of water, pesticide application rates and concentrations in soil and water. The results were satisfactory for the undissociated pesticides (atrazine, carbofuran, dimethoate, isoproturon, lindane, simazine and trifluralin), whose concentrations in water were mostly predicted within an order of magnitude of measured data. The results for the dissociated pesticides (dichlorprop, MCPA, mecoprop) were less satisfactory, giving generally much higher predicted concentrations in water. The use of the SoilFug model is suggested for the calculation of predicted environmental concentrations (PECs) in water, since it generally produces acceptable results from a relatively small set of input data, most of which is generally available.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Toxic properties of pesticides.
1994
Cheremisinoff N.P. | King J.A.
The pollution potential and flows of nitrogen to waters and the atmosphere from grassland under grazing
1994
Jarvis, S.C. (AFRC Institute of Grassland and Environmental Research, North Wyke, Okehampton, Devon EX20 2SB (United Kingdom))
The use of animal waste as a crop fertilizer
1994
Ap Dewi, I. (School of Agricultural and Forest Sciences, University College of Wales, Bangor, Gwynedd LL57 2UW (United Kingdom))
Finite element modeling of the transport of reactive contaminants in variably saturated soils with LEA and non-LEA sorption
1994
Gambolati, G. | Pini, G. | Putti, M. | Paniconi, C. (Department of Mathematical Models, University of Padua, Via Belzoni 7, 35131 Padua (Italy))
A new method of rainfall-runoff modelling and its applications in catchment hydrology
1994
Littlewood, I.G. | Jakeman, A.J. (Institute of Hydrology, Wallingford, OX10 3BB (United Kingdom))