Nanoparticles (NPs) of urban dust pose a potential threat to public health. Nevertheless, this issue remains largely unexplored due to a lack of biological research related to these NPs. This may be attributed to the complexity of the separation, characterization, analysis, and subsequent preparation of NPs of urban dust for biological studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicroplastics is known to be ubiquitous in aquatic environment. Quantification of microplastics in natural waters is an important problem of analytical chemistry, the solution of which is needed for the assessment of water quality and potential risks for water inhabitants and consumers. Separation methods play a key role in the correct quantification of microplastics in natural waters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCoiled tube field-flow fractionation (CTFFF) is currently applied to environmental and material studies. In the present work, a novel zone elution mode in CTFFF has been proposed and developed. Zone elution mode is based on the separation of particles by stepwise decreasing the flow rate of the carrier fluid and their subsequent elution at a constant flow rate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAgeing processes of vehicle catalytic converters inevitably lead to the release of Pt and Pd into the environment, road dust being the main sink. Though Pt and Pd are contained in catalytic converters in nanoparticulate metallic form, under environmental conditions, they can be transformed into toxic dissolved species. In the present work, the distribution of Pt and Pd between dissolved, nanoparticulate, and microparticulate fractions of Moscow road dust is assessed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVolcanic activity is one of the main sources of natural nanoparticles. It has been found earlier that the concentration of toxic metals/metalloids in nanoparticles of volcanic ash may be one or two orders of magnitude higher than in bulk sample. However, fate and behavior of toxic metals/metalloids depend on the type of their binding to nanoparticles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNatural nanomaterials, which play a very important role in environmental processes, are so far poorly studied. Firstly, the separation of nanoparticles from the bulk sample is a challenge. Secondly, the absence of reference natural nanomaterials makes it impossible to compare the results obtained by different researchers and develop a unified methodology for the separation and characterization of natural nanomaterials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanoparticles (NPs) in the environment have a potential risk for human health and the ecosystem due to their ubiquity, specific characteristics, and properties (extreme mobility in the environment, abilities to accumulate of toxic elements and penetrate into living organisms). There is still a gap in studies on the chemical composition of natural NPs. The main reason is the difficulty to recover NPs, which may represent only one-thousandth or less of the bulk environmental sample, for further dimensional and quantitative characterization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Pollut Res Int
June 2019
Nowadays, widespread application of engineered nanoparticles (ENPs) inevitably leads to their release into the environment. Soils are regarded as the ultimate sink for ENPs. The study on mobility of ENPs in soils is important in the assessment of potential risks related to their toxicity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA comprehensive approach has been developed to the assessment of composition and properties of atmospherically deposited dust in the area affected by a copper smelter. The approach is based on the analysis of initial dust samples, dynamic leaching of water soluble fractions in a rotating coiled column (RCC) followed by the determination of recovered elements and characterization of size, morphology and elemental composition of nano-, submicron, and micron par ticles of dust separated using field-flow fractionation in a RCC. Three separated size fractions of dust (<0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRoad-deposited sediments (RDS) present a sink for traffic-related pollutants including heavy metals (HMs). HMs associated with RDS particles enter the urban aquatic environment during rainfall events and have adverse effects for biota. RDS nanoscale particles (NSPs) require special consideration due to their specific properties, extremely high mobility in the environment, and ability to penetrate into living organisms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAt present, there is concern about engineered nanoparticles in the environment, whereas natural nanoparticles (NPs) and their impact are often neglected. In our paper, we demonstrate the important role of nanoparticles of volcanic ash in transport of toxic elements on a global scale. A single volcanic eruption can eject millions of tons of ash.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA comprehensive approach has been developed to the assessment of composition and properties of atmospherically deposited dust in the area affected by a copper smelter. The approach is based on the analysis of initial dust samples, dynamic leaching of water soluble fractions in a rotating coiled column (RCC) followed by the determination of recovered elements and characterization of size, morphology and elemental composition of nano-, submicron, and micron particles of dust separated using field-flow fractionation in a RCC. Three separated size fractions of dust (<0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFContinuous-flow (dynamic) leaching in a rotating coiled column has been applied to studies on the mobility of Zn, Cd, Cu, Pb, Ni, Sb, As, S, and other potentially toxic elements in atmospherically deposited dust samples collected near a large copper smelter (Chelyabinsk region, Russia). Water and simulated "acid rain" (pH 4) were used as eluents. The technique enables not only the fast and efficient leaching of elements but as well time-resolved studies on the mobilization of heavy metals, sulphur, and arsenic in environmentally relevant forms to be made.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFField-flow fractionation (FFF) is a very powerful and versatile set of liquid chromatography-like elution methods. However, conventional FFF separations occur in thin channels and the sample weight injected is usually less than 1 mg to avoid overloading. The fractionation in a rotating coiled column (RCC), which can be attributed to sedimentation FFF, enables the handling sample weight to be increased at least up to 1 g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFor the first time, nano- and submicron particles of street dust have been separated, weighted, and analyzed. A novel technique, sedimentation field-flow fractionation in a rotating coiled column, was applied to the fractionation of dust samples with water being used as a carrier fluid. The size and morphology of particles in the separated fractions were characterized by electronic microscopy before digestion and the determination of the concentration of elements by ICP-AES and ICP-MS.
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