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Xinbin Feng
Researcher at Chinese Academy of Sciences
Publications - 464
Citations - 23849
Xinbin Feng is an academic researcher from Chinese Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mercury (element) & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 72, co-authored 413 publications receiving 19193 citations. Previous affiliations of Xinbin Feng include University of Gothenburg & Ryerson University.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Global mercury emissions to the atmosphere from anthropogenic and natural sources
Nicola Pirrone,Sergio Cinnirella,Xinbin Feng,R. B. Finkelman,Hans R. Friedli,Joy J. Leaner,Robert P. Mason,Arun B. Mukherjee,Glenn B. Stracher,David G. Streets,Kevin Telmer +10 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provided an up-to-date assessment of global mercury emissions from anthropogenic and natural sources, including re-emission processes and primary emissions from natural reservoirs.
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A Synthesis of Progress and Uncertainties in Attributing the Sources of Mercury in Deposition
Steve E. Lindberg,Russell Bullock,Ralf Ebinghaus,Daniel R. Engstrom,Xinbin Feng,William F. Fitzgerald,Nicola Pirrone,Eric M. Prestbo,Christian Seigneur +8 more
TL;DR: It is agreed that the uncertainty is strongly dependent upon scale and that the question as stated is answerable with greater confidence both very near and very far from major point sources, assuming that the “global pool” is a recognizable “source.”
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Anthropogenic mercury emissions in China
TL;DR: In this article, an inventory of mercury emissions from anthropogenic activities in China is compiled for the year 1999 from official statistical data, which includes open biomass burning, but does not include natural sources or re-emission of previously deposited mercury.
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Remediation of mercury contaminated sites - A review
TL;DR: This paper describes the commonly employed and emerging techniques for mercury remediation, namely: stabilization/solidification (S/S), immobilization, vitrification, thermal desorption, nanotechnology, soil washing, electro-remediation, phytostabilization, phytoextraction and phytovolatilization.
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Human exposure to methylmercury through rice intake in mercury mining areas, Guizhou province, China.
Xinbin Feng,Ping Li,Guangle Qiu,Shaofeng Wang,Guanghui Li,Lihai Shang,Bo Meng,Hongmei Jiang,Weiyang Bai,Zhonggen Li,Xuewu Fu +10 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that the main human exposure to Me-Hg via food consumption is not restricted to fish, but in some cases in mining areas of China to frequent rice meals, which is likely to cause serious Hg pollution to the local environment.