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Trace metal

About: Trace metal is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 5125 publications have been published within this topic receiving 181046 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Water in the Dan River drainage was suitable for drinking; however, an exposure risk assessment model suggests that As and Sb in the Laojun and Laoguan rivers could pose a high risk to humans in terms of adverse health and potential non-carcinogenic effects.
Abstract: Dissolved trace elements and heavy metals in the Dan River drainage basin, which is the drinking water source area of South-to-North Water Transfer Project (China), affect large numbers of people and should therefore be carefully monitored. To investigate the distribution, sources, and quality of river water, this study integrating catchment geology and multivariate statistical techniques was carried out in the Dan River drainage from 99 river water samples collected in 2013. The distribution of trace metal concentrations in the Dan River drainage was similar to that in the Danjiangkou Reservoir, indicating that the reservoir was significantly affected by the Dan River drainage. Moreover, our results suggested that As, Sb, Cd, Mn, and Ni were the major pollutants. We revealed extremely high concentrations of As and Sb in the Laoguan River, Cd in the Qingyou River, Mn, Ni, and Cd in the Yinhua River, As and Sb in the Laojun River, and Sb in the Dan River. According to the water quality index, water in the Dan River drainage was suitable for drinking; however, an exposure risk assessment model suggests that As and Sb in the Laojun and Laoguan rivers could pose a high risk to humans in terms of adverse health and potential non-carcinogenic effects.

101 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, high resolution profiles of trace elements (Fe, Mn, Co, As, Cu, Cr, Ni and Pb) were assessed using the DET and DGT techniques in silty, organically enriched, sub-tidal sediments of the Belgian coast during late winter and spring 2008.

101 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the Clark Fork River Superfund Site was analyzed and it was found that in the <1-μm fraction the trace metals were almost exclusively associated with nanoparticulate Fe and Ti oxides.
Abstract: Environmental context. Determining associations between trace metals and nanoparticles in contaminated systems is important in order to make decisions regarding remediation. This study analysed contaminated sediment from the Clark Fork River Superfund Site and discovered that in the <1-μm fraction the trace metals were almost exclusively associated with nanoparticulate Fe and Ti oxides. This information is relevant because nanoparticles are often more reactive and show altered properties compared with their bulk equivalents, therefore affecting metal toxicity and bioavailability. Abstract. Analytical transmission electron microscopy (aTEM) and flow field flow fractionation (FlFFF) coupled to multi-angle laser light scattering (MALLS) and high-resolution inductively coupled plasma mass spectroscopy (HR-ICPMS) were utilised to elucidate relationships between trace metals and nanoparticles in contaminated sediment. Samples were obtained from the Clark Fork River (Montana, USA), where a large-scale dam removal project has released reservoir sediment contaminated with toxic trace metals (namely Pb, Zn, Cu and As) which had accumulated from a century of mining activities upstream. An aqueous extraction method was used to recover nanoparticles from the sediment for examination; FlFFF results indicate that the toxic metals are held in the nano-size fraction of the sediment and their peak shapes and size distributions correlate best with those for Fe and Ti. TEM data confirms this on a single nanoparticle scale; the toxic metals were found almost exclusively associated with nano-size oxide minerals, most commonly brookite, goethite and lepidocrocite.

101 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The concentration and distribution of Cr, Cu, Pb and Zn among the tissues of a freshwater fish exposed to combined (composite) tannery effluent was investigated and the accumulation was found to be dose- and time-dependent.

101 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the results of trace metal partitioning between particulate (> 1.2 μm), colloidal (1.2μm-1 kDa) and truly dissolved (< 1 kDa), were reported in the polluted section of the Upper Vistula River compared with the non-polluted headwaters.

100 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202394
2022225
2021197
2020220
2019193
2018186