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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
161

Development of an on-site ex-situ unsaturated-flow remediation process for trace metal contaminated soils

Andrade, Marc-David January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
162

Immobilisation of metal in quartz sands by ball milling

Zhang, ZhengXi Unknown Date (has links)
Previous work has shown that when inorganic compounds are milled with quartz in a high energy ball mill the elements are sequestered into the quartz matrix and cannot be easily recovered by simple extraction methods. In this study lead (II) oxide, copper (II) oxide, magnesium oxide, zinc oxide and sodium hydroxide were milled with quartz sand and the recoveries of the metals investigated in detail. The standard EPA3050B method (acid digestion of sediments, sludge and soils) for extractable metals was compared to exhaustive HF digestion method based on ASTM C146-94a (test methods for chemical analysis of glass sand) and UDC 666.123:543.06 (chemical analysis of soda-lime and borosilicate glass). From these two analyses the total recovery of metals was determined. It was found that the elements extracted by the EPA3050B method decreased in an approximately logarithmic way with milling time. The metals are apparently strongly sequestered into the fractured quartz. Total HF digestion of the insoluble matrix gave good recovery of the “lost” elements. A reliable analytical procedure has been developed and the mechanisms leading to this sequestering are discussed. Particle size analysis and electron microscopy of milled samples support a process of brittle alloy formation as the proposed mechanism whereby the elements are sequestered into the milled quartz.
163

Impacts of urbanisation and metal pollution on freshwater turtles

Browne, Carol January 2005 (has links)
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / Over 85% of Australia’s population live in urban areas and many turtle populations occur on Australia’s east coast where urban development is particularly concentrated. In the state of NSW, over half of the freshwater coastal wetlands have been highly modified or completely destroyed, and urban freshwater creeks often have only a narrow strip of weedy bushland left along their banks. Even though habitat degradation may result in declines in density and distribution of turtle populations, there are few data on Australian freshwater turtles in urban areas. In addition to extreme habitat alteration, urban waterways are innundated with anthropogenic contaminants from sources including wet weather surface runoff and industrial and sewage discharges. Pollutants can impact all systems of the body with potentially severe effects on reproduction and survival that can result in deterioration of animal populations. Turtles are particularly susceptible to anthropogenic contaminants due to their intimate contact with the aquatic environment, an often high trophic level, their ability to accumulate toxins, and their longevity. For almost all contaminants, the degree of accumulation in and effect on reptile species is unknown. Sublethal effects in field situations are particularly poorly studied and have never been documented in pleurodiran turtles. As a pioneering work in Australian reptile ecotoxicology, this thesis takes a broad approach, but focuses primarily on immunotoxicity and reproductive toxicity – two areas that greatly impact the size and continuance of animal populations. The aim of the thesis is to provide baseline data on haematology, cellular immunology and tissue metal concentrations for freshwater turtles in Sydney – data which were lacking for all Australian turtle species prior to this study. After initial assessment of the distribution and density of freshwater turtles in Sydney, the study examines the potential for Sydney’s turtles as sentinel species for measuring the effects of pollution on haematology, cellular immunity, and parasite loads; and considers the relationships between urban metal pollution and reproductive variables. The relative suitability of non-lethally sampled tissues (blood, carapace, egg) for use in biomonitoring is also assessed. Three species of Australian freshwater turtles were found in the Sydney region, with Chelodina longicollis occurring naturally in the area, and populations of Emydura macquarii and Elseya latisternum likely to have originated from translocated individuals. The North American turtle Trachemys scripta elegans was not encountered during this study despite concerns that it was establishing in the Sydney area. Chelodina longicollis populations were widespread, although poor recruitmment was indicated by low capture rates and comparatively low percentage of juveniles at some sites. Not so widespread, Emydura macquarii was present in much larger numbers than C. longicollis and with a high juvenile component in some areas of southeastern Sydney. I provide information on erythrocyte and leucocyte parameters in C. longicollis over a range of sites, pollution conditions, and seasons. In C. longicollis, numbers of lymphocytes, heterophils and eosinophils varied over sites, but not due to pollution from sewage treatment plant outfalls. There was significant temporal variation in erythrocyte, lymphocyte, eosinophil, heterophil, and basophil number, the heterophil:lymphocyte ratio, and haematocrit, but not consistently among sites. Future studies should ensure simultaneous sampling across sites for comparative purposes. Similarly, turtle populations downstream of sewage treatment plant outfalls showed no consistent difference in number, body condition, blood haemogregarine load, or leech (haemogregarine vector) load from upstream populations. Leech (Helobdella papillornata, with some Placobdella sp.) load and haemogregarine numbers increase dramatically once C. longicollis reach a carapace of 110 mm. The number of leeches on turtles varied across season, year, and site. Turtles with large numbers of leeches had reduced haematocrit, but the presence of leeches had no other correlations with haematological parameters. Haemogregarine numbers did not change across season or year, and were not correlated with haematological variables. The hypothesis that pollutants lead to an increase in normal blood protozoa due to reduced immunity thus was not supported. The concentration of metals in C. longicollis and E. macquarii carapace and in lagoon sediments varied significantly over four urban and four national park sites, but not based on this split. Pollution in periurban areas, such as illegal dumping of toxic wastes and atmospheric deposition of pollutants, means that each site must be classified separately as to degree of metal pollution. There was little or no affect of species, size, sex, or gravidity on metal concentrations in the carapace of adult turtles. Emydura macquarii had higher concentrations of blood Fe than C. longicollis from a different site, but this is possibly due to an increase in haemoglobin resulting from the site’s low aquatic oxygen concentration rather than any increased environmental exposure. Chelid turtles in Sydney do not show much promise as a biomonitoring tool. Carapace analysis is largely discounted as a potential tool for metal biomonitoring due to poor correlations between potentially toxic metals in non-lethally samplable tissues (carapace, claw) and internal organs (liver, kidney) or bone (femur). However, carapace metal concentrations still potentially reflect long-term metal presence or different dietary exposures as evidenced by the significant variation in concentrations over sites. A rare correlation was found for concentrations of aquatic Pb and carapace Pb, and a correlation was also found for concentrations of blood Pb and carapace Pb in E. macquarii. Thus any potential for tissue biomonitoring seems to lie with this highly ecotoxicologically relevant metal. Although two other ecotoxicologically relevent metals, Cu and Se, were significantly higher in egg contents of C. longicollis compared to E. macquarii, these elements are also essential and a lack of baseline values means it is not known if this simply reflects natural taxonomic variation. Ni, a metal of toxicological concern in sea turtles, was not present in egg contents, and only variably present in eggshell. The absence of Pb from eggs, despite its presence in many maternal tissues, suggests that selective metal uptake into eggs may be protective of toxic elements, rather than eggs serving as a maternal method of toxic metal elimination as has been previously suggested. The paucity of toxic metal detection in eggs renders them unlikely tissues for biomonitoring. The maternal tissue or tissues or environmental source from which egg metals originate remains obscure, although a significant negative effect of maternal carapace concentrations of Ca and Mg on eggshell thickness in E. macquarii indicates that there may be mobilisation of Ca and Mg from the carapace for eggshell formation. The only metal whose eggshell concentration correlated with eggshell thickness was Mg, indicating that ecotoxic metals previously associated with eggshell thinning are not problematic in the Sydney chelids. As with North American turtles living at polluted sites, none of the chelid hatchlings were found to have any overt abnormalities. Hatching success was poor and hatching mass low for eggs of both C. longicollis and E. macquarii, although results from natural nests are required to determine whether or not this was an outcome of hormonally-induced oviposition and artificial incubation. It is difficult to interpret metal concentrations found in the soft tissues, calcified tissues, and eggs of chelonians due to the paucity of comparative data, and much more research is required on tissue metal concentrations before patterns will emerge. This especially applies to pleurodires for which no previous information is available. From comparisons with the limited data available for other freshwater turtles, marine turtles, and other aquatic reptiles, it does not appear that Sydney’s turtle populations have unusually high metal concentrations in tissues. Exclusion of toxic metals such as Pb from the egg may also be protective to the developing embryo. An ability to live in polluted habitats, while limiting the accumulation of toxic contaminants, may be one key to their persistence in urban waterways from which other freshwater fauna have disappeared. Reproductive impacts such as low embryo survival and small hatchling weights require more rigorous examination, but may have less effect on these animals which have such naturally high egg and hatchling mortality. Although it was generally hard to demonstrate biochemical, physiological or population impacts of contaminants, C. longicollis from a site with severe sewage pollution did display unusual alterations in a number of haematological variables, body condition, and carapace bone structure. Despite this, the population was large and had a comparatively high ratio of juveniles. Additionally, the adverse haematological alterations appeared reversible. Thus, successful populations in Sydney probably are more dependent on basic ecological needs being met, than on low levels of environmental contaminants. The ongoing persistence of chelid populations in Sydney is likely to be dependent to some extent on their opportunistic diets, which generally make animals less vulnerable to habitat modification and the reduction in prey item diversity following pollution (Mason 1996, Allanson & Georges 1999), with a further benefit possibly bestowed at some sites on E. macquarii by its omnivory.
164

Sediment quality guidelines for Australian waters : a framework for development and use

Buckley, David, n/a January 1997 (has links)
The Australian and New Zealand Environment and Conservation Council (ANZECC) and the Agriculture and Resource Management Council of Australia and New Zealand (ARMCANZ) have announced that the 1997 review of the Australian Water Quality Guidelines will include for the first time, consideration of sediment quality guidelines. For this reason, it is timely to review the methods for establishing such guidelines, and the manner in which they could be used in managing the quality of sediments in Australian rivers, lakes and drainage systems. In this thesis, the problem of the development of sediment quality guidelines is introduced and basic questions relating to the development of such guidelines are addressed. The importance of sediment monitoring and sediment quality assessment in aquatic ecosystem management is demonstrated, and the role of sediment quality guidelines in the process of sediment quality assessment is discussed. The arguments considered in this thesis are illustrated by specific reference to the setting and use of sediment quality guidelines for heavy metal contamination. A number of physico-chemical factors (grain size distribution, pH, redox potential, alkalinity and hardness, salinity, organic matter) can affect the bioavailability and toxicity of contaminants in sediments, and these factors may vary spatially and temporally within and between sediment deposits. Changes in physico-chemical conditions as a result of natural or anthropogenic processes may lead to major changes in bioavailability of sediment contaminants. The variability of these physico-chemical factors has ramifications for the way in which sediment quality guidelines are derived and used. Factors affecting the way in which toxicity is measured (test species chosen, toxicological end-point measured, duration of test relative to life-cycle), and toxicity data is interpreted, are also important to the development of useful sediment quality guidelines. All of these factors must be taken into account in deriving sediment quality guidelines for Australian conditions. The large number of factors affecting the sensitivity and efficiency of sediment quality guidelines means that a simple set of numerical guidelines, as has been used in the past, is not appropriate. A multi-step assessment procedure will be required. Methods of setting sediment quality guidelines that have been used by authorities in overseas jurisdictions were reviewed. Advantages and disadvantages of the various methods were compared. None of the methods used overseas has been shown to be applicable to Australian conditions. In the absence of a suitable method for deriving Australian sediment quality guidelines in the short term, the adoption of the Canadian Interim Sediment Quality Guidelines as interim sediment quality guidelines for Australia is recommended. Sediment quality guidelines need to be viewed in the context of the overall environmental management process, of which they form an integral part. The policy background to environmental management in Australia, and the management frameworks that have been put in place to implement the policy, are outlined. The AS/NZS/ISO 14000 series of standards for environmental management systems provides a framework which is consistent with the principles and objectives of environmental management in Australia. It therefore provides an appropriate framework within which to develop and use sediment quality guidelines. Within the broad AS/NZS/ISO 14000 policy, a framework for the development and use of sediment quality guidelines is proposed, which will provide a technically and legally defensible basis for the management of aquatic sediments in Australia, in the short term and long term. The proposed framework involves the setting of Interim Sediment Quality Guidelines for Australia, based on the best scientific knowledge currently available. The framework recognises that the factors affecting the bioavailability and toxicity of sediment contaminants are complex, and that the current level of knowledge of sediment processes is incomplete. Therefore, a conservative approach to setting guidelines is taken, and a highly sensitive guideline based on that used in Canada, is proposed. The framework further recognises that this approach will lead to over protection of the environment in some cases, so a "Decision Tree" approach is taken. The "decision tree" allows the consideration of more complex interactions than can be incorporated into simple numeric guidelines, while attempting to simplify the assessment process. In keeping with the ISO 14000 series of standards for environmental management, the framework also explicitly includes steps designed to ensure that monitoring data are regularly collated, and analysed, and where necessary, guidelines are able to be updated in light of new knowledge gleaned from the review process. The proposed framework is appropriate to, and supportive of, the principles of environmental management as set out in Australian Government policy documents, inter governmental and international agreements, and legislation. It provides a basis for the on-going collection of data suited to increasing our understanding of the factors influencing the behaviour of contaminants in sediments, and thereby lead to continual improvement in sediment quality guidelines for use in Australian conditions.
165

Metalheads och Moralpanik : En undersökning kring Hårdrockens självpresentation, värde och kulturella etablering genom Close-Up Magazine

Fried, Therese January 2007 (has links)
<p>Uppsatsen granskar det spänningsförhållande som existerar mellan Hårdrockens uttryck och den oinvigda allmänhetens moralpanik. Genom självpresentation och smakdistinktioner undersöker den också hur Hårdrocken idag har positionerat sig som en etablerad kultur med ursprung och tradition. På så sätt behandlar uppsatsen vad och vem som definierar Hårdrockens kulturella värde och position. Undersökningen görs genom en textanalys av den svenska hårdrockstidningen Close-Up Magazine. Uppsatsen granskar även hur tidningen positionerar och presenterar sig som betydande aktör inom Hårdrockens verksamhetsfält.</p>
166

Transcriptional and physiological response of Nitrosomonas europaea to inhibition by chlorinated aromatics and heavy metals

Sandborgh, Sean C. 31 March 2011 (has links)
This research investigates the physiological and transcriptional responses of Nitrosomonas europaea when exposed to chlorinated aromatic compounds and heavy metals under varying environmental conditions. It was found that transcriptional responses of identified sentinel genes correlate well with nitrification inhibition. Sorption of metals to biomass was also investigated and found not to correlate well with N. europaea inhibition. Whole genome microarray experiments were performed to define the transcriptional response of N. europaea when exposed to chlorobenzene. 13 out of 2460 N. europaea genes were significantly up-regulated after a 1-hour exposure to 4 μM chlorobenzene. HPLC analysis revealed that chlorobenzene was being oxidized primarily into 4-chlorophenol, and further physiological studies revealed that the presence of 4-chlorophenol could account for the inhibitory responses observed. RT-qPCR analysis of several differentially regulated genes verified that similar transcriptional responses were occurring for both chlorobenzene and 4-chlorophenol. 50% inhibitory concentrations of chlorobenzene and 4-chlorophenol resulted in moderate up-regulation of studied genes, however, increasing the concentration of 4-chlorophenol to achieve nitrification inhibition of 93% or more dramatically increased the fold regulation of several of the identified up- and down- regulated genes of interest. Increasing the 4-chlorophenol exposure time to 3 hours at the higher inhibition levels led to a general decrease in amplitude of transcriptional response for all genes tested. Cultures of N. europaea were exposed to various amounts of cadmium in aqueous solution containing EDTA, a strong metal-chelating organic, to control free ionic cadmium²⁺ (Cd²⁺) concentrations. Inhibition of ammonia oxidation as well as transcriptional up-regulation of merA, an identified sentinel gene for exposure to cadmium was found to correlate well with the concentration of Cd²⁺. The concentration of Cd²⁺ required to significantly affect N. europaea cells was found to be in the nanomolar range, which is several orders of magnitude lower than values reported in the literature for cadmium inhibition to mixed-culture activated sludge systems. The sorption of cadmium to the cells was found to be proportional to both the concentration of total cadmium and the concentration of Cd²⁺. At the concentration of metals required to cause approximately 50% nitrification inhibition, specific oxygen uptake results indicate the inhibition is specific to AMO with HAO and downstream energy-generation processes intact. To investigate more closely the inhibitory interactions between heavy metals and AMO, N. europaea inhibition by cadmium, zinc and silver was studied under substrate-limiting conditions. Unlike incubation in oxic environments, 1 hour incubations of N. europaea with cadmium and silver under anoxic conditions did not cause inhibition of nitrification activity after re-suspension in oxic media. In contrast, zinc, which is normally considered an analogue of cadmium in terms of toxic effect and transport mechanisms, was non-inhibitory to N. europaea when exposed in media lacking ammonia. Transcriptional response of merA closely followed the inhibition patterns, with samples which were inhibited after the removal of the metal having significant up-regulation of the gene, and those samples which were uninhibited showing no significant change in merA transcript levels compared to controls. Although sorbed metal concentrations were not found to be predictive of either extent of inhibition or transcriptional response, significantly more cadmium, zinc and silver were sorbed to biomass when incubated in aerobic media compared to anoxic media. Sorption in oxic media was found to be independent of AMO activity and similar results were obtained using Deinococcus radiodurans, a non-nitrifying gram-positive extremophile. The results indicate that greater heavy metal sorption to biomass in oxic environments may be due to general membrane chemistry effects. / Graduation date: 2011 / Access restricted to the OSU Community at author's request from March 31, 2011 - March 31, 2012
167

Traffic-Related Metals in Soil and Sediment in Mauritius / Trafikrelaterade metaller i jord och sediment på Mauritius

Petersson, Liselott January 2005 (has links)
Trafik utgör en stor föroreningskälla av tungmetaller i vägnära jordar och särskilt är det koppar (Cu), bly (Pb) och zink (Zn) som associeras med fordonstrafik. I ett historiskt perspektiv härrör blyutsläpp främst från bränsleförbränning, medan kopparemissioner (i första hand från slitage av bromsbelägg) och zinkutsläpp (från däck) från trafik står för så mycket som hälften av det urbana utsläppet av koppar och zink till omgivningen. Koppar-, bly- och zinkkoncentrationer i vägnära jord och sediment undersöktes inom avrinningsområdet för Grand River North West i Mauritius. Eftersom totalmetall utgör en dålig indikator på den mängd metall som finns potentiellt tillgänglig för biota användes extraktion med hjälp av 0.5 M HCl tillsammans med totalkoncentrationer. Den rumsliga variationen längsmed transekt vinkelrätt mot vägar undersöktes liksom variationen med djupet. Observerade kopparkoncentrationer var jämförbara med bakgrundsnivåer. Till skillnad från Cu var koncentrationer av Pb och Zn förhöjda i den omedelbara närheten till vägar med relativt stor trafikintensitet, men halterna minskade snabbt med avståndet. Resultat från platserna för jordreferenser visar på storskalig förorening av Pb på ön. Uppmätta kopparkoncentrationer kunde inte knytas till trafikens påverkan. Vid regn kan metaller som finns i förorenat vägdamm och förorenad jord övergå till löslig form, eller sköljas bort i partikulär form, och transporteras till närliggande vattendrag. I Mauritius är det här av speciell vikt eftersom flodsediment till slut kommer att deponeras i de känsliga kustområdena som omger ön. Dock tyder inte resultaten på förhöjda metallhalter i sediment nära de studerade vägarna. Även om erhållna resultat av Cu inte visar på någon förhöjning och zonen med hög förorening av Pb och Zn är relativt smal, är det angeläget att följa utvecklingen eftersom antalet fordon växer snabbt i Mauritius, vilket kan förändra dagens situation och ge upphov till större miljöpåverkan. För att undvika eventuella ekologiska skador är det därför av stor vikt att i fortsättningen övervaka situationen längs landets vägar. / Traffic has been identified as a significant heavy metal polluter of roadside soils, and copper (Cu), lead (Pb) and zinc (Zn) in particular are associated with road travel. In a historic perspective, the Pb contribution from anthropogenic sources to nature has predominantly been a result of fuel combustion. There are indications that Cu (mainly through braking system) and Zn (emissions from tires) released from traffic give rise to as much as half of the total urban contribution of copper and zinc to the environment. Concentrations of Cu, Pb and Zn in roadside soils and sediment have been determined at selected roads within the Grand River North West watershed in Mauritius. As total metal concentrations are not a suitable indicator of the metal concentrations that are potentially available to biota, metals extractable in 0.5 M HCl have been determined along with total concentrations. The spatial variation in metal concentration along soil transects perpendicular to roads were investigated, as was the variation with depth. Observed Pb and Zn concentrations exhibited elevated levels in topsoil in the immediate vicinity of roads with relatively large traffic densities, but the decrease in concentration with distance was rapid. Results from soil reference sites pointed to a large scale Pb pollution on the island. In comparison, observed Cu concentrations could not be assigned any influence from traffic at the selected study sites. In the event of rain, metals contained in polluted road dust and soil may be released into soluble form, or flushed from roadways as particulate matter, and transported to nearby water courses. In Mauritius, this is of particular importance as sediment in rivers eventually may be deposited in the sensitive coastal areas of the island. However, results do not indicate that there were any elevated levels of heavy metals in sediment close to roads that were investigated in this study. Although Cu concentrations in roadside soils did not show any enrichment and the zone of elevated Pb and Zn concentrations was not wide, there is a concern that the continuing rapid increase in the number of vehicles in Mauritius will change the situation, possibly resulting in greater impact on the surrounding environment. Hence, in order to avoid any ecological damage, it is desirable to continue monitoring the situation along highways in the country.
168

"Doing it For The Dudes": A Comparative Ethnographic Study of Performative Masculinity in Heavy Metal and Hardcore Subcultures

Sewell, John Ike, Jr. 27 June 2012 (has links)
Abstract: This ethnographic study compares and contrasts performative masculinities of the overwhelmingly male heavy metal (HM) and hardcore (HC) subcultures. Conclusions derived from this research indicate the following: identities associated with HM and HC conflate masculinity with working-classness, HM and HC identities (and thus masculinities) are merging at present; participation in HM and HC enclaves can serve to symbolically marginalize constituents, and this symbolic marginalization can result in repercussions in the lived world outside of subculture; the hegemonic masculinity of HM and HC subcultures is subsidiary hegemonic masculinity, meaning that it supports the male-dominated structure of mainstream culture without empowering HM and HC males in an extra-subcultural sense; and that despite these negative ramifications, HM and HC participants still find the shared identities and community interaction of these enclaves to be empowering. Keywords: heavy metal, hardcore, subculture, masculinity, performativity, gender, class, ideology, rock music, identity
169

Survey on heavy metals contaminated soils in Thai Nguyen and Hung Yen provinces in Northern Vietnam / Khảo sát đất ô nhiễm kim loại nặng ở tỉnh Thái Nguyên và tỉnh Hưng Yên thuộc miền Bắc Việt Nam

Chu, Thi Thu Ha 07 August 2012 (has links) (PDF)
In Vietnam, soil contamination with lead and cadmium at very high level was investigated anddiscovered in the surrounding areas of zinc-lead mining and processing factory in Tan Long (Dong Hy district, Thai Nguyen province) and around the lead-recycling smelter in Chi Dao (Van Lam district, Hung Yen province). The survey on soil contaminated by arsenic due to the tin mining and sifting activities in Ha Thuong (Dai Tu district, Thai Nguyen province) was also carried out. In Tan Long, the concentrations of lead and cadmium in the old solid waste dump from zinc-lead factory varied from 1,100 to 13,000 mg·kg-1, and from 11.34 to 61.04 mg·kg-1, respectively. Soil Pollution Indexes (SPI) of lead and cadmium were highest in the old solid waste dump area, followed by the ones in the rice paddy soils. In Chi Dao, the soils of many sites were polluted with lead and cadmium such as in the gardens of lead-recycling households where the concentrations of lead and cadmium were 7,000 - 15,000 mg·kg-1 and 1.8 - 3.6 mg·kg-1. In rice paddies, the soils were also polluted by lead. SPI of lead in paddy soil areas within 300 m radius from the lead smelter were from 3.6 to 100 fold higher than the safe limit. The sediment from the ditch near the lead smelters contained extremely high levels of lead (7,000 - 110,000 mg·kg-1) and cadmium (3.8 - 17.7 mg·kg-1). The tin mining and sifting activities in Ha Thuong was the cause for the arsenic contamination of the soil in this area. The arsenic contents in soils at all locations investigated were higher than 320 mg·kg-1 (dry weight) and up to 3,809 mg·kg-1. / Tại Việt Nam, đất bị ô nhiễm bởi chì và ca-đi-mi với hàm lượng cao đã được điều tra phát hiện ở các khu vực phụ cận của nhà máy khai thác và chế biến kẽm/chì thuộc địa phận xã Tân Long, huyện Đồng Hỷ, tỉnh Thái Nguyên và các khu vực phụ cận của lò tái chế chì thuộc địa phận xã Chỉ Đạo, huyện Văn Lâm, tỉnh Hưng Yên. Sự khảo sát đất bị ô nhiễm bởi a-sen do các hoạt động khai thác và tuyển thiếc ở xã Hà Thượng, huyện Đại Từ, tỉnh Thái Nguyên cũng đã được tiến hành. Tại xã Tân Long, nồng độ chì và ca-đi-mi trong bãi chất thải rắn cũ từ nhà máy sản xuất kẽm chì là 1.100 - 1.300 mg.kg-1 và từ 11,34 đến 61,04 mg.kg-1, tương ứng. Chỉ số ô nhiễm đất (SPI) của chì và ca-đi-mi cao nhất trong khu vực đổ chất thải rắn cũ, tiếp theo sau là ở các ruộng lúa. Tại xã Chỉ Đạo, đất ở nhiều địa điểm đã bị ô nhiễm chì và ca-đi-mi chẳng hạn như trong khu vườn của các hộ gia đình tái chế chì, nồng độ chì và ca-đi-mi là 7.000 - 15.000 mg.kg-1 và 1,8 - 3,6 mg.kg-1. Trong cánh đồng lúa, đất cũng bị ô nhiễm bởi chì. Chỉ số ô nhiễm đất của chì (SPI-Pb) trong cánh đồng lúa trong vòng bán kính 300 m từ lò tái chế chì cao hơn giới hạn của đất an toàn từ 3,6 đến 100 lần. Trầm tích thu từ kênh gần lò tái chế chì chứa hàm lượng chì rất cao (.7000 - 110.000 mg.kg-1) và ca-đi-mi (3,8 - 17,7 mg.kg-1). Việc khai thác và tuyển thiếc tại xã Hà Thượng đã gây ra ô nhiễm a-sen trong đất tại khu vực này. Hàm lượng a-sen trong đất tại tất cả các địa điểm nghiên cứu cao hơn 320 mg.kg-1 (trọng lượng khô), đặc biệt là lên đến 3809 mg.kg-1.
170

Development and Optimization of Novel Emulsion Liquid Membranes Stabilized by Non-Newtonian Conversion in Taylor-Couette Flow for Extraction of Selected Organic and Metallic Contaminants

Park, Yonggyun 19 May 2006 (has links)
Extraction processes employing emulsion liquid membranes (ELMs), water-in-oil emulsions dispersed in aqueous phase, have been shown to be highly efficient in removing a variety of organic and inorganic contaminants from industrial wastewaters. As a result, they have been considered as alternative technologies to other more common separation processes such as pressure-driven membrane processes. Unfortunately, a widespread use of the ELM process has been limited due to the instability of emulsion globules against fluid shear. Breakup of emulsions and subsequent release of the internal receptor phase to the external donor phase would nullify the extraction process. Numerous studies have been, therefore, made in the past to enhance the stability of ELMs. Examples include adding more surfactants into the membrane phase and increasing the membrane viscosity. However, increased stability has been unfortunately accompanied by loss in extraction efficiency and rate in most reported attempts. The primary objective of this research is to apply the ELMs in a unique contacting device, a Taylor-Couette column, which provides a relatively low and uniform fluid shear that helps maintaining the stability of emulsion without compromising the extraction efficiency of a target compound. The ELM used in this study is made of membrane phase converted into non-Newtonian fluid by polymer addition, which provides additional uncommon remedy for the problem. This innovative ELM process was optimized to treat various types of simulated industrial wastewaters containing selected phenolic compounds and heavy metals. Experiments performed in this study suggested that the newly developed ELM process achieved exceptionally high overall removal efficiencies for the removal of these target compounds in relatively short contact time. Mechanistic predictive models were further developed and verified with the experimental data. Combined with the experimental data and novel mathematical predictive models, this study is expected to have a high impact on immediate practices of emulsion liquid membrane technologies in relevant industries.

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