| Literature DB >> 23206223 |
Foppe Smedes1, L Alexander van Vliet, Kees Booij.
Abstract
The freely dissolved concentration (C(w,0)) in the pore water and the accessible (releasable) concentration in the sediment (C(as,0)) are important parameters for risk assessment. These parameters were determined by equilibrating contaminated sediments and passive samplers using largely differing sampler–sediment ratios. This method is based on the principle that incubations at low sampler/sediment ratios yield the concentration in the pore water (minor depletion of the sediment phase) and incubations at high sampler/sediment ratios yield the accessible concentration in the sediment (maximum depletion of the sediment phase). It is shown that equilibration was faster in dense suspensions and at high sampler/sediment ratios when compared to low sampler/sediment ratios. An equilibrium distribution model was used to estimate C(w,0) and C(as,0) by nonlinear least-squares regression. The method was evaluated for three sediments (harbor, estuarine, marine). Accessible concentrations of 13 PAHs were 2 (low K(ow)) to 10 (high K(ow)) times lower than the total concentrations (three sediments). By contrast, the accessible concentrations of 15 PCBs were about 1.2 times lower than the total concentrations and displayed no trend with K(ow) (one sediment). Implications for risk assessment and considerations for application of multi-ratio equilibrium passive sampling with other sediments are discussed.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23206223 DOI: 10.1021/es3040945
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Technol ISSN: 0013-936X Impact factor: 9.028