Search results for "Pollutant"

showing 10 items of 1389 documents

Pollutant Emissions in Ports: A Comprehensive Review

2021

In recent decades, maritime transport demand has increased along with world population and global trades. This is associated with higher pollution levels, including the emissions of GHG and other polluting gases. Ports are important elements within maritime transport and contribute themselves to pollutant emissions. This paper aims to offer a comprehensive yet technical review of the latest related technologies, explaining and covering aspects that link ports with emissions, i.e., analyzing, monitoring, assessing, and mitigating emissions in ports. This has been achieved through a robust scientific analysis of very recent and significant research studies, to offer an up-to-date and reliable…

CO<sub>2</sub>PortsPollutionTechnologyPollutant emissionsmedia_common.quotation_subjectComputerApplications_COMPUTERSINOTHERSYSTEMSGeneral Materials ScienceCivil and Structural Engineeringmedia_commonbusiness.industryTRenewable energiesBuilding and ConstructionWorld populationEnvironmental economicsGeotechnical Engineering and Engineering GeologyPort (computer networking)Computer Science ApplicationsRenewable energyMaritime transportEmissionsGreenhouse gasSustainabilityResearch studiesCO2businessInfrastructures
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Sorption of thallium(I) ions by peat.

2013

The increasing industrial use of thallium has raised the need for removal of this highly toxic element from wastewater. Thallium is more toxic than cadmium, copper, zinc, lead and mercury and as it is easily accumulated in humans, animals and plants, it poses a threat to both the environment and human health. Peat has been used as an effective, relatively cheap and easily available sorbent to treat waters containing heavy metals. In this study, peat was characterized and used as sorbent for the removal of Tl(I) ions from aqueous solution. The effect of initial Tl(I) concentration, pH, contact time, temperature and ionic strength was studied in batch mode. The maximum sorption capacity of pe…

CadmiumEnvironmental EngineeringAqueous solutionSorbentOsmolar ConcentrationTemperaturechemistry.chemical_elementSorptionZincHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationMercury (element)Water PurificationKineticsSoilchemistryModels ChemicalIonic strengthEnvironmental chemistryThalliumAdsorptionThalliumWater Pollutants ChemicalWater Science and TechnologyNuclear chemistryWater science and technology : a journal of the International Association on Water Pollution Research
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Hepatic responses of gene expression in juvenile brown trout (Salmo trutta lacustris) exposed to three model contaminants applied singly and in combi…

2007

Chemical pollution of the aquatic environment is almost always the result of multiple rather than single toxic compounds. The possibility of separating the effects of key risk chemicals from those of others, including their joint effects, is of clear theoretical interest and high technical importance. We addressed this goal using multiple gene expression profiling in the liver of juvenile brown trout (Salmo trutta lacustris) exposed to three model chemicals (cadmium, carbon tetrachloride [CCl4], and pyrene) administered singly, in binary and trinary combinations at low acutely sublethal concentrations, and in the partial dose–response manner. Differentially expressed genes were grouped by c…

CadmiumTroutHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesischemistry.chemical_elementGene ExpressionBiologybiology.organism_classificationToxicologyGene expression profilingchemistry.chemical_compoundBrown troutchemistryBiochemistryLiverGene expressionCarbon tetrachlorideEnvironmental ChemistryPyreneAnimalsEnvironmental PollutantsSalmoMode of actionCarbon TetrachlorideCadmiumEnvironmental toxicology and chemistry
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In-situ suspended aggregate microextraction: A sample preparation approach for the enrichment of organic compounds in aqueous solutions.

2015

Abstract This work presents in-situ suspended aggregate microextraction (iSAME) as a new and expedient sample preparation method. This new concept capitalizes on the general principles of in-situ solvent formation microextraction, in the sense that extraction is carried out in a supramolecular aggregate phase, which is formed in-situ in the sample through one-step process involving ion-association between a cationic surfactant and a benzene sulfonic acid derivative. The suspended aggregate containing the analytes is then collected in the form of a thin-film on the surface of a common filter paper by suction filtration. The entrapped analytes are released by completely dissolving the thin-fi…

Calibration curveLiquid Phase MicroextractionAnalytical chemistryBiochemistryAnalytical Chemistrylaw.inventionMatrix (chemical analysis)ElectrolyteslawSample preparationSolid phase extractionOrganic ChemicalsDissolutionFiltrationAqueous solutionChromatographyChemistryOrganic ChemistryExtraction (chemistry)Osmolar ConcentrationWaterGeneral MedicineHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationSolventsFiltrationWater Pollutants ChemicalJournal of chromatography. A
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A chamber to test the response of radon detectors to changing environmental conditions.

2011

Radon risk assessment is carried out with accurate measurements with active or passive instrumentation. All radon detectors must be calibrated and tested using a radon chamber containing a known concentration of radon produced by specific sources of 226Ra. Some of the chambers can also be used to test the response of detectors as a function of environmental conditions. In this case, it can be inferred a calibration curve with respect to changing of the parameter considered. For this aim, a new chamber radon was designed and realized to perform both calibration of instruments and to study the detector response in a large range of variation of the environmental parameters (pressure, 700 - 110…

Calibration curveSettore ING-IND/20 - Misure E Strumentazione NucleariInstrumentationNuclear engineeringchemistry.chemical_elementRadoncalibration chamberRadiation MonitoringCalibrationRadon detector calibration radon chamberHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingRadon chamberRadiationRadiological and Ultrasound TechnologyDetectorPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthHumidityGeneral MedicinechemistryAir Pollutants RadioactiveRadonCalibrationenvironmental conditionEnvironmental scienceRadiation monitoringEnvironmental MonitoringRadiation protection dosimetry
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The effect of experimental lead pollution on DNA methylation in a wild bird population

2021

Anthropogenic pollution is known to negatively influence an organism’s physiology, behaviour, and fitness. Epigenetic regulation, such as DNA methylation, has been hypothesized as a potential mechanism to mediate such effects, yet studies in wild species are lacking. We first investigated the effects of early-life exposure to the heavy metal lead (Pb) on DNA methylation levels in a wild population of great tits (Parus major), by experimentally exposing nestlings to Pb at environmentally relevant levels. Secondly, we compared nestling DNA methylation from a population exposed to long-term heavy metal pollution (close to a copper smelter), where birds suffer from pollution-related decrease in…

Cancer Researchenvironmental epigeneticsPopulationZoologyGenomeEpigenesis GeneticecotoxicologyraskasmetallitMetals HeavyAnimalspollutionEpigeneticsPasseriformesympäristömyrkyteducationMolecular BiologyGeneOrganismPbparus majorParuseducation.field_of_studybiologyMethylationPlan_S-Compliant_NOtalitiainenDNA Methylationbiology.organism_classificationDNA-metylaatioekotoksikologiaLeadepigenetiikkainternationalDNA methylationecological epigeneticssaastuminenEnvironmental PollutantslyijyResearch Paper
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TCDD-dependent downregulation of gamma-catenin in rat liver epithelial cells (WB-F344).

2002

TCDD (2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin) is the most potent tumor promoter ever tested in rodents. Although it is known that most of the effects of TCDD are mediated by binding to the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR), the mechanisms leading to tumor promotion still remain to be elucidated. Loss of contact-inhibition is a characteristic hallmark in tumorigenesis. In WB-F344 cells, TCDD induces a release from contact-inhibition manifested by a 2- to 3-fold increase in DNA-synthesis and the emergence of foci when TCDD (1 nM) is given to confluent cells. We focussed our interest on potential cell membrane proteins mediating contact-inhibition in WB-F344 cells, namely E-cadherin, alpha,- beta,-…

Cancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtyPolychlorinated DibenzodioxinsTime FactorsOctoxynolBlotting WesternDetergentsDown-RegulationDownregulation and upregulationInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsFluorescent Antibody Technique IndirectCells Culturedbeta CateninConfluencybiologyReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionLiver NeoplasmsContact inhibitionEpithelial CellsDNAAryl hydrocarbon receptorActin cytoskeletonBlotting NorthernCadherinsCell biologyRatsCytoskeletal ProteinsEndocrinologyPhenotypeOncologyDesmoplakinsLiverMicroscopy FluorescenceCateninMutationbiology.proteinProteasome inhibitorCarcinogensTrans-ActivatorsTumor promotionEnvironmental Pollutantsgamma CateninCell Divisionalpha Cateninmedicine.drugInternational journal of cancer
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Ion-pair in-tube solid-phase microextraction and capillary liquid chromatography using a titania-based column: application to the specific lauralkoni…

2012

Abstract A quick, miniaturized and on-line method has been developed for the determination in water of the predominant homologue of benzalkonium chloride, dodecyl dimethyl benzyl ammonium chloride or lauralkonium chloride (C 12 -BAK). The method is based on the formation of an ion-pair in both in-tube solid-phase microextraction (IT-SPME) and capillary liquid chromatography. The IT-SPME optimization required the study of the length and nature of the stationary phase of capillary and the processed sample volume. Because to the surfactant character of the analyte both, the extracting and replacing solvents, have played a decisive role in the IT-SPME optimized procedure. Conditioning the capil…

Capillary actionDetergentsAnalytical chemistrySolid-phase microextractionBiochemistryChlorideAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundLimit of DetectionmedicineSolid Phase Microextractionchemistry.chemical_classificationDetection limitTitaniumCapillary electrochromatographyChromatographyChemistryOrganic ChemistryWaterGeneral MedicineAmmonium chlorideCounterionBenzalkonium CompoundsAmmonium acetateWater Pollutants Chemicalmedicine.drugChromatography LiquidJournal of chromatography. A
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Exposure to moderate concentrations of tropospheric ozone impairs tree stomatal response to carbon dioxide.

2011

With rising concentrations of both atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO(2)) and tropospheric ozone (O(3)), it is important to better understand the interacting effects of these two trace gases on plant physiology affecting land-atmosphere gas exchange. We investigated the effect of growth under elevated CO(2) and O(3), singly and in combination, on the primary short-term stomatal response to CO(2) concentration in paper birch at the Aspen FACE experiment. Leaves from trees grown in elevated CO(2) and/or O(3) exhibited weaker short-term responses of stomatal conductance to both an increase and a decrease in CO(2) concentration from current ambient level. The impairement of the stomatal CO(2) respo…

Carbon dioxide in Earth's atmosphereStomatal conductanceAir PollutantsOzoneHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisGrowing seasonPlant physiologyGeneral MedicineCarbon DioxideToxicologyPollutionTrace gasTreesPlant Leaveschemistry.chemical_compoundOzonechemistryStress PhysiologicalEnvironmental chemistryCarbon dioxideBotanyPlant StomataEnvironmental scienceTropospheric ozoneBetulaEnvironmental pollution (Barking, Essex : 1987)
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Response and Recovery of Brain Acetylcholinesterase Activity in the European Eel,Anguilla anguilla,Exposed to Fenitrothion

1998

European eel (Anguilla anguilla) were exposed to sublethal fenitrothion concentrations in a continuous flow-through system for 4 days. Brain acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity was evaluated after 2, 8, 12, 24, 32, 48, 56, 72, and 96 h pesticide exposure. Results indicated that AChE activity in eel brains decreased as the concentration of fenitrothion increased. The pesticide induced significant inhibitory effects on the AChE activity ofA. anguilla,ranging from >40% inhibition at a sublethal concentration of 0.02 ppm to >60% inhibition at a sublethal concentration of 0.04 ppm. Eel were exposed to both fenitrothion concentrations for 96 h and then allowed a period of recovery in pesticide-f…

Carboxylic Ester HydrolasesInsecticidesmedicine.medical_specialtyAchéHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisBiological effectFenitrothionchemistry.chemical_compoundInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsDose-Response Relationship DrugPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthBrainFenitrothionGeneral MedicinePesticideAnguillaPollutionAcetylcholinesteraselanguage.human_languageEuropeEndocrinologychemistryToxicityAcetylcholinesteraselanguageCholinesterase InhibitorsWater Pollutants ChemicalRecovery phaseEcotoxicology and Environmental Safety
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