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Hongli Tan

Researcher at Jinan University

Publications -  29
Citations -  1730

Hongli Tan is an academic researcher from Jinan University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chemistry & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 22 publications receiving 984 citations. Previous affiliations of Hongli Tan include Southern Illinois University Carbondale.

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Bisphenol Analogues Other Than BPA: Environmental Occurrence, Human Exposure, and Toxicity-A Review.

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of the current state of knowledge on the occurrence of bisphenol analogues (other than BPA) in the environment, consumer products and foodstuffs, human exposure and biomonitoring, and toxicity.
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Novel and Traditional Organophosphate Esters in House Dust from South China: Association with Hand Wipes and Exposure Estimation.

TL;DR: Exposure estimation suggests that hand-to-mouth contact represents another important pathway in addition to dust ingestion and that children are subjected to higher OPE exposure than adults.
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Co-Existence of Organophosphate Di- and Tri-Esters in House Dust from South China and Midwestern United States: Implications for Human Exposure.

TL;DR: Ways to explore more possible di-OPEs in indoor environments and elucidate their sources, human exposure pathways, and toxicokinetics are explored are needed and concerns on human exposure to dust associated di-opEs are raised.
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Emerging and legacy flame retardants in indoor dust from East China.

TL;DR: A suite of legacy and emerging flame retardants in dust from dwellings, cars, and university computer labs was determined, exhibiting a consistent dominance of organophosphate flame retardant (OPFRs) over polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) and other alternative Flame retardants (AFRs) regardless of microenvironments.
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From Sediment to Top Predators: Broad Exposure of Polyhalogenated Carbazoles in San Francisco Bay (U.S.A.).

TL;DR: The study demonstrated the broad exposure of PHCZs in San Francisco Bay and their characteristics of bioaccumulation and biomagnification along with dioxin-like effects, and raised the need for additional research to better elucidate their sources, environmental behavior, and fate in global environments.