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Hazardous Metals in the Environment

M. Stoeppler (Edited by)

9780444890788, Elsevier Science

Hardback, published 13 April 1992

548 pages
24 x 16.5 x 3.2 cm, 1.16 kg

"..a very worthwhile book, that can be thoroughly recommended..." --Analytica Chimica Acta

"The text and numerous well selected references will serve as a valuable aid for the many researches involved in trace metal and species analysis." --Fresenius Journal of Analytical Chemistry

"...is likely to find favour with all environmental analytical chemists and for this readership it is an excellent reference book." --The Analyst

The execution of detailed studies on the fate and levels of hazardous elements in the environment, foodstuffs and in human beings has become a major task in environmental research and especially in analytical chemistry. This has led to a demand to develop new methodology and optimize that already in use.


The book offers the reader a general introduction to the problem areas that are currently being tackled, followed by chapters on sampling and sample preservation, strategies and applications of the archiving of selected representative specimens for long-term storage in environmental specimen banks. This is supplemented by the example of wine as a preserved - frequently, already historical - specimen which clearly reflects technological changes over time. The following chapters review sample treatment, present an overview on the most frequently and successfully applied trace analytical methods for metals and metal compounds, and introduce the increasingly important methods for identifying and quantifying metal species in sediments and soils (speciation).


The chapters in the second part of the book provide data on analytical methods for determining the levels of toxicologically, ecotoxicologically and ecologically important elements in environmental and biological materials, including information on the separation and quantification of chemical and organomatallic species. The elements treated are aluminium, arsenic, cadmium, chromium, cobalt, lead, mercury, nickel, selenium and thallium. The final chapter treats quality assurance and the importance of the continuous use of appropriate reference materials to avoid erroneous results.

Introduction. 1. Metal Analysis - Problem Areas and Analytical Tasks (M. Stoeppler). Sampling and Sample Treatment. 2. Sampling and Sample Storage (M. Stoeppler). 3. Environmental Specimen Banking (R.A. Lewis, B. Klein, M. Paulus, C. Horras). 4. Wine - An Enological Specimen Bank (H.R. Eschnauer, M. Stoeppler). 5. Sample Treatment (P. Tsch&ouml
pel). Elemental Analysis. 6. Analytical Methods and Instrumentation - A Summarizing Overview (M. Stoeppler). 7. Chemical Speciation and Environmental Mobility of Heavy Metals in Sediments and Soils (M. Sager). 8. Cadmium (M. Stoeppler). 9. Lead (S.J. Hill). 10. Mercury (I. Drab&aelig
k, &Aring
. Iverfeldt). 11. Arsenic (K.J. Irgonic). 12. Thallium (M. Sager). 13. Chromium (N.J. Miller-Ihli). 14. Nickel and Cobalt (M. Stoeppler, P. Ostapczuk). 15. Aluminium (W. Frech, A. Cedergren). 16. Selenium (M. Ihnat). 17. Quality Assurance and Validation of Results (B. Griepink, M. Stoeppler). Subject Index.

Subject Areas: Nuclear issues [RNQ], Physical chemistry [PNR], Analytical chemistry [PNF]

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