| Literature DB >> 31434262 |
Xiaoping Li1,2, Bin Liu3,4, Yu Zhang3,4, Jiwen Wang3,4, Hameed Ullah3,4, Ming Zhou3,4, Liyuan Peng3,4, Ana He3,4, Xu Zhang3,4, Xiangyang Yan4,5, Tao Yang3,4, Lijun Wang3,4, Hongtao Yu4,6.
Abstract
A total of 116 dust samples in downtown within the city wall were collected, and the spatial occurrence, source and health risk status of 19 trace metal/metalloids bound in street dusts (SDs) were systematically investigated. Geochemical maps, associations, risk models and indices were calculated to define levels of distribution, possible natural or anthropogenic sources, ecological and human health risks. It was found that the wide variations of these 19 trace metals would be observed in spatial maps, which indicated strongly anthropogenic activities inputs. Compared to the calculations of the potential ecological risk index of toxic trace metals, Pb (Eri = 20.32) ranked at the level of considerable ecological risk. The non-carcinogenic and carcinogenic risk from most trace metals exposed to children and adults were no significant health risks, except for the non-carcinogenic risk of Cr and As to children, and the carcinogenic risk of Cr to adults. The unacceptable risk locations were observed at traffic conjunctions, which should be given attention. The source apportionment results indicated that the trace metals/metalloids Co, Ga, Nb, As, Ni, and Y, coupled with main elements Al, K, Mg, Ca and Si, would possibly originate from "Soil Re-suspension", whereas Fe, Cu, Rb, La, Ba, Mn, Ti, Ce and Zr were possibly derived from "Brake Wear". As regards the Na, no valid assumption was formulated about the presence of this element in brake wear, while Cr, Sr, Zn were possibly associated with "Tire Wear". Comparatively, V would be suggested as a representative source of fuel consumption, and Pb could possibly belong to "Traffic Pigment". It was noted that the barbican city, surrounded by the Xi'an Ancient City Wall at 12 m high, would trap the trace metal emissions, and consequently increase the health risk for local residents.Entities:
Keywords: Xi’an; health risk; spatial distribution; street dust; trace metal/metalloids; traffic-related sources
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31434262 PMCID: PMC6727082 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16162992
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1The distribution map of dust sample sites. (City picture source from Qi e hao Da lv xing jia).
Statistical results of chemical elements content in Street dust in Xi’an.
| Elements | LLD | Unit | Mean | Minimum | Maximum | S.D. | C.V. | Background Value of Soil in Xi’an [ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trace metal/metalloids | As | 0.6 | mg/kg | 11.73 | 2.60 | 39.20 | 4.25 | 0.36 | 12.00 |
| Ba | 6.3 | mg/kg | 748.23 | 560.70 | 1366.20 | 127.75 | 0.17 | 542.00 | |
| Ce | 14.5 | mg/kg | 88.59 | 36.40 | 141.90 | 14.65 | 0.17 | 68.00 | |
| Co | 0.9 | mg/kg | 13.71 | 10.50 | 26.40 | 2.14 | 0.16 | 14.00 | |
| Cr | 3.1 | mg/kg | 175.18 | 129.40 | 784.80 | 66.21 | 0.38 | 75.00 | |
| Cu | 0.7 | mg/kg | 50.91 | 19.70 | 390.40 | 38.62 | 0.76 | 27.00 | |
| Ga | 0.7 | mg/kg | 14.54 | 10.80 | 19.30 | 1.82 | 0.13 | 16.00 | |
| La | 7.3 | mg/kg | 31.92 | 18.90 | 42.00 | 4.01 | 0.13 | 40.00 | |
| Mn | 1.6 | mg/kg | 486.42 | 412.40 | 622.40 | 34.68 | 0.07 | 660.00 | |
| Nb | 0.5 | mg/kg | 11.90 | 9.70 | 18.00 | 1.38 | 0.12 | 15.00 | |
| Ni | 0.7 | mg/kg | 21.04 | 6.80 | 122.50 | 11.79 | 0.56 | 32.00 | |
| Pb | 1.4 | mg/kg | 93.45 | 40.70 | 289.10 | 42.76 | 0.46 | 23.00 | |
| Rb | 0.7 | mg/kg | 44.19 | 17.40 | 65.80 | 10.24 | 0.23 | 106.00 | |
| Sr | 0.7 | mg/kg | 186.54 | 80.20 | 380.20 | 47.64 | 0.26 | 242.00 | |
| Ti | 8.7 | mg/kg | 2949.18 | 2387.00 | 4162.00 | 245.52 | 0.08 | 4092.00 | |
| V | 2.4 | mg/kg | 69.28 | 53.20 | 83.60 | 4.89 | 0.07 | 88.00 | |
| Y | 0.8 | mg/kg | 18.57 | 9.20 | 32.60 | 5.37 | 0.29 | 24.00 | |
| Zn | 0.8 | mg/kg | 272.04 | 102.90 | 4344.80 | 416.20 | 1.53 | 70.00 | |
| Zr | 0.8 | mg/kg | 120.13 | 47.40 | 301.20 | 38.94 | 0.32 | 209.00 | |
| Major metals | Al2O3 | 0.01 | % | 8.04 | 6.87 | 9.28 | 0.45 | 0.06 | 12.33 |
| CaO | 0.01 | % | 8.17 | 3.24 | 14.28 | 1.37 | 0.17 | 6.33 | |
| Fe2O3 | 0.01 | % | 5.36 | 4.14 | 11.2 | 0.95 | 0.18 | 4.75 | |
| K2O | 0.01 | % | 1.45 | 1.09 | 1.62 | 0.08 | 0.06 | 2.59 | |
| MgO | 0.01 | % | 1.96 | 1.68 | 2.72 | 0.15 | 0.08 | 2.26 | |
| Na2O | 0.01 | % | 2.52 | 2.00 | 3.69 | 0.26 | 0.10 | 1.44 | |
| SiO2 | 0.02 | % | 37.18 | 30.19 | 43.97 | 2.45 | 0.07 | 58.76 | |
Figure 2The contour geo-map of trace metal/metalloids in street dust.
Figure 3The spatial distribution of potential ecological risk evaluated by the index.
Figure 4Loadings of the rotated eigenvectors obtained in a principal component analysis (PCA, Varimax rotation method) of the trace metals in SD in Xi’an, NW China.
Figure 5The brake wear contribution (A) and the busy transportation map of the Xi’an ancient city wall (B). (Picture source from www.vcg.com).
Figure 6The spatial risk of total non-carcinogenic for children and adult exposure to the traffic-related multi-trace metals/metalloids in street dust.
Figure 7The spatial risk of total carcinogenic for children and adult exposure to the traffic-related multi-trace metals/metalloids in street dust.