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Aleksandar Popović

Researcher at University of Belgrade

Publications -  99
Citations -  1862

Aleksandar Popović is an academic researcher from University of Belgrade. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fly ash & Sphagnum girgensohnii. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 94 publications receiving 1567 citations.

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Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in different types of smoked meat products from Serbia

TL;DR: The contents of the16 EU priority PAHs in six different meat products from Serbia (beef ham, pork ham, bacon without skin, bacon with skin, cajna sausage and sremska sausage) were examined during the process of smoking to establish the suitability of BaP as a marker both for 16 EU priorityPAHs and 12 IARC probably and possibly carcinogenic PAhs.
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Active moss biomonitoring of trace elements with Sphagnum girgensohnii moss bags in relation to atmospheric bulk deposition in Belgrade, Serbia

TL;DR: Active biomonitoring with wet and dry moss bags was used to examine trace element atmospheric deposition in the urban area of Belgrade and significant accumulation of most elements occurred in the exposed moss bags compared with the initial moss content.
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Trace and major element pollution originating from coal ash suspension and transport processes.

TL;DR: Coal ash obtained by coal combustion in the "Nikola Tesla A" power plant in Obrenovac, near Belgrade, Yugoslavia, is mixed with water of the Sava river and transported to the dump, assessing pollution caused by leaching of some minor and major elements during ash transport through the pipeline.
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Determination of metal content in some herbal drugs-Empirical and chemometric approach.

TL;DR: Flame atomic absorption and emission spectrometry (FAAS, FAES), as well as inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectromaetry (ICP-AES), were applied in this work, and four significant factors identified by principal component analysis (PCA) were attributed partly to the significant influential sources and high mobility of some elements thus referring to potential anthropogenic contamination.
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Monitoring of trace element atmospheric deposition using dry and wet moss bags: accumulation capacity versus exposure time.

TL;DR: Investigation of the peculiarities of trace element accumulation in moss bags technique (active biomonitoring) in Belgrade (Serbia) found that irrigation of moss resulted in a higher accumulation capacity for most of the elements, especially for Cr, Zn, As, Se, Br, and Sr.