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Stefan B. Haderlein

Researcher at University of Tübingen

Publications -  116
Citations -  7758

Stefan B. Haderlein is an academic researcher from University of Tübingen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sorption & Adsorption. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 107 publications receiving 6982 citations. Previous affiliations of Stefan B. Haderlein include University of New Brunswick & Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology.

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Reduction of Substituted Nitrobenzenes by Fe(II) in Aqueous Mineral Suspensions.

TL;DR: The results of this study demonstrate that Fe(ll) adsorbed on iron (hydr)oxide surfaces or surface coatings may play an important role in the reductive transformation of organic pollutants in subsurface environments.
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Specific Adsorption of Nitroaromatic Explosives and Pesticides to Clay Minerals

TL;DR: In this article, it was demonstrated that NACs may adsorb specifically and reversibly to natural clay minerals in aqueous suspension, and specific adsorption coefficients for polynitroaromatic compounds including some important contaminants such as explosives and dinitrophenol herbicides.
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Compound-specific stable isotope analysis of organic contaminants in natural environments: a critical review of the state of the art, prospects, and future challenges

TL;DR: An alternative scheme to evaluate isotope data is outlined that would enable estimates of position-specific kinetic isotope effects and, thus, allow one to extract mechanistic chemical and biochemical information.
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Reactivity of Fe(II)-bearing minerals toward reductive transformation of organic contaminants.

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that abiotic reactions with surface-bound Fe(II) may affect or even dominate the long-term behavior of reducible pollutants in the subsurface, particularly in the presence of Fe(III) bearing minerals.
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Magnetite and Green Rust: Synthesis, Properties, and Environmental Applications of Mixed-Valent Iron Minerals

TL;DR: The aim is to present a detailed overview of the key aspects related to these mineral phases which can be used as an important resource for researchers working in a diverse range of fields dealing with mixed-valent iron minerals.