J
Jana Klánová
Researcher at Masaryk University
Publications - 278
Citations - 8921
Jana Klánová is an academic researcher from Masaryk University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 47, co-authored 240 publications receiving 7107 citations. Previous affiliations of Jana Klánová include Indiana University & Environment Canada.
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Health and ecological risk assessment of emerging contaminants (pharmaceuticals, personal care products, and artificial sweeteners) in surface and groundwater (drinking water) in the Ganges River Basin, India.
Brij Mohan Sharma,Jitka Bečanová,Martin Scheringer,Anežka Sharma,Girija K. Bharat,Paul Whitehead,Jana Klánová,Luca Nizzetto +7 more
TL;DR: Negligible risk for humans was estimated from PPCPs in the drinking groundwater sources along the Ganges River, whereas moderate risks to P PCPs and ASWs were estimated for aquatic organisms in the Ganga River.
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Polymer selection for passive sampling: a comparison of critical properties
TL;DR: Differences in polymer-water partition coefficients spanned two orders of magnitude, with the lowestvalues observed for POM and the highest values observed for LDPE and EXACT, and for the ten tested SRs, this range was less than 0.4 log units.
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Assessing the influence of meteorological parameters on the performance of polyurethane foam-based passive air samplers.
TL;DR: For purposes of comparing passive sampler derived data for persistent organic pollutants, the factor of 2 variability observed for mainly gas-phase compounds is deemed to be acceptable in many instances for semiquantitative analysis.
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Use of diagnostic ratios for studying source apportionment and reactivity of ambient polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons over Central Europe
TL;DR: In this article, the suitability of 5 commonly used diagnostic ratios (DRs) for PAH source apportionment was evaluated using ambient air samples at central European sites during 1996-2008.
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Persistent organic pollutants in soils and sediments from James Ross Island, Antarctica
TL;DR: A prevalence of low-mass PAHs, less chlorinated PCBs, and more volatile chemicals indicates that the long-range atmospheric transport from populated areas of Africa, South America, and Australia is the most probable contamination source for the solid matrices in James Ross Island.