| Literature DB >> 28340462 |
Yareli A Sariñana-Ruiz1, Jorge Vazquez-Arenas2, Fabiola S Sosa-Rodríguez3, Israel Labastida4, Ma Aurora Armienta5, Antonio Aragón-Piña6, Miguel A Escobedo-Bretado1, Laura S González-Valdez7, Patricia Ponce-Peña1, Hugo Ramírez-Aldaba1, René H Lara8.
Abstract
Total, bioaccessible and mobile concentrations of arsenic and fluorine are determined in polluted surface soil within the Comarca Lagunera region using standardized protocols to obtain a full description of the environmental behavior for these elements. The composition of mineral phases associated with them is evaluated with microscopic and spectroscopic techniques. Mineralogical characterizations indicate that ultra-fine particles (<1-5 μm) including mimetite-vanadite (Pb5(AsO4)3Cl, Pb5(AsO4, VO4)3Cl)-like, lead arseniate (Pb3(AsO4)2)-like and complex arsenic-bearing compounds are main arsenic-bearing phases, while fluorite (CaF2) is the only fluorine-bearing phase. Total fluorine and arsenic concentrations in surface soil range from 89.75 to 926.63 and 2.7-78.6 mg kg-1, respectively, exceeding in many points a typical baseline value for fluorine (321 mg kg-1), and trigger level criterion for arsenic soil remediation (20 mg kg-1); whereas fluoride and arsenic concentrations in groundwater vary from 0.24 to 1.8 mg L-1 and 0.12-0.650 mg L-1, respectively. The main bioaccessible percentages of soil in the gastric phase (SBRC-G) are estimated for arsenic from 1 to 63%, and this parameter in the intestinal phase (SBRC-I) fluorine from 2 to 46%, suggesting human health risks for this region. While a negligible/low mobility is found in soil for arsenic (0.1-11%), an important mobility is determined for fluorine (2-39%), indicating environmental risk related to potential fluorine release. The environmental and health risks connected to arsenic and fluorine are discussed based on experimental data.Entities:
Keywords: Arsenic; Bioaccessible concentrations; Comarca Lagunera; Fluorine; Mobility
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28340462 DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2017.03.032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemosphere ISSN: 0045-6535 Impact factor: 7.086