Affiner votre recherche
Résultats 1-4 de 4
Calibration of the Chemcatcher passive sampler for the monitoring of priority organic pollutants in water
2006
Vrana, B. (Branislav) | Mills, G.A. | Dominiak, E. | Greenwood, R.
An integrative passive sampler consisting of a C18 Empore® disk receiving phase saturated with n-octanol and fitted with low-density polyethylene diffusion membrane was calibrated for the measurement of time-weighted average concentrations of hydrophobic micropollutants, including polyaromatic hydrocarbons and organochlorine pesticides, in water. The effect of temperature and water turbulence on kinetic and thermodynamic parameters characterising the exchange of analytes between the sampler and water was studied in a flow-through system under controlled conditions. It was found that the absorption of test analytes from water to the sampler is related to their desorption to water. This allows for the in situ calibration of the uptake of pollutants using offload kinetics of performance reference compounds. The sampling kinetics are dependent on temperature, and for most of the tested analytes also on the flow velocity. Sampler–water partition coefficients did not significantly change with temperature.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Eisenia fetida increased removal of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons from soil
2006
Contreras-Ramos, S.M. | Alvarez-Bernal, D. | Dendooven, L.
The removal of phenanthrene, anthracene and benzo(a)pyrene added at three different concentrations was investigated with or without earthworms (Eisenia fetida) within 11 weeks. Average anthracene removal by the autochthonous micro-organisms was 23%, 77% for phenanthrene and 13% for benzo(a)pyrene, while it was 51% for anthracene, 47% for benzo(a)pyrene and 100% for phenanthrene in soil with earthworms. At 50 and 100 mg phenanthrene kg−1E. fetida survival was 91% and 83%, but at 150 mg kg−1 all died within 15 days. Survival of E. fetida in soil amended with anthracene ≤1000 mg kg−1 and benzo(a)pyrene ≤150 mg kg−1 was higher than 80% and without weight loss compared to the untreated soil. Only small amounts of PAHs were detected in the earthworms. It was concluded that E. fetida has the potential to remove large amounts of PAHs from soil, but more work is necessary to elucidate the mechanisms involved.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Risks from Historical Contaminated Sediments in the Rhine Basin
2006
Heise, Susanne | Förstner, Ulrich
The holistic river basin approach of the European Water Framework Directive (WFD) requires the combined assessment of ecological risks and the development of remediation measures. This paper presents a three-step strategy for the assessment of risks on Rotterdam harbour arising from historical contaminated sediment in the Rhine river basin, by the identification of (1) substances of concern, (2) areas of concern and (3) areas of risk with regard to the probability of polluting the sediments in the downstream reaches. The pragmatic approach provides initial evidence, that sediment-associated hexachlorobenzene (HCB) from the Higher and Upper Rhine has a significant effect on the quality of dredged material from Rotterdam harbour and that this HCB contamination is a candidate for the Category 1 of WFD Article 16 Source/Pathway S.11.1 'Historical Pollution from Sediments': This HCB source can contribute to a failure of the objectives of the WFD in the Rhine Basin and may require additional measures for its control.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Sedimentary Record of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in the Gulf of Trieste (Northern Adriatic Sea)
2006
Heath, Ester | Ogrinc, Nives | Faganeli, Jadran | Covelli, Stefano
To reconstruct a history of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) pollution in the Gulf of Trieste, one of the largest urbanized areas in the Adriatic Sea, we analyzed three long sediment cores collected between 1996 and 1997. Concentrations of total PAHs, the sum of 16 PAH compounds and six of their methylated analogues, in all three cores show a decrease from 600-800 ng g-¹, at the surface, to levels below 250 ng g-¹ in deepest layers (down to 3 m). The same trend was shown with separate representative pyrogenic PAHs (pyrene, benzofluoranthene and phenanthrene). Using Hg as a recent geochronological tracer, we observe an increasing input of PAHs since the beginning of the 20th Century and, especially, after the Second World War coinciding with increasing industrialization and urbanization of the region. This correlation is supported by PAH ratios that are indication of combustion processes and represent a marker for anthropogenic inputs. No correlation exists between PAHs and black carbon within the core profiles, indicating two different fractions of the 'black carbon continuum'.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]