Fate and toxicity of spilled chemicals in groundwater and soil environment I: strong acids
We reviewed the chemical/physical properties, toxicity, environmental fate, and ecotoxicity of strong acids in soil and groundwater environments. We recommend that sulfuric acid and hydrofluoric acid be classified as chemicals of priority control based on volumes used, toxicity, carcinogenicity, and...
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Korean Society of Environmental Helath and Toxicology
2018-12-01
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doaj-86114c32ccc244a985619a76161c01b62020-11-25T01:17:03ZengKorean Society of Environmental Helath and ToxicologyEnvironmental Health and Toxicology2233-65672018-12-0133410.5620/eht.e2018019821Fate and toxicity of spilled chemicals in groundwater and soil environment I: strong acidsDoyun ShinYoungyeon KimHee Sun MoonWe reviewed the chemical/physical properties, toxicity, environmental fate, and ecotoxicity of strong acids in soil and groundwater environments. We recommend that sulfuric acid and hydrofluoric acid be classified as chemicals of priority control based on volumes used, toxicity, carcinogenicity, and past significant spill events. Understanding the behavior and transport of spilled strong acids in soil and groundwater environments requires a multi-disciplinary approach, as they can undergo a variety of geochemical and biochemical reactions with complex geomedia. The toxicity of spilled acid is dependent on the characteristics of the geomedia exposed to the acid and the amount of residual protons following acid–substrate interaction. Soil texture, cation exchange capacity, mineral composition, bedrock type, and aluminum content may be important factors affecting the toxicity of spilled acid in soil-groundwater environments. We expect that the results of this study will contribute preliminary data for future research on chemical spills.http://www.e-eht.org/upload/pdf/eht-33-4-e2018019.pdfStrong acidChemical spillEnvironmental toxicitySoil and groundwaterSulfuric acidHydrofluoric acid |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Doyun Shin Youngyeon Kim Hee Sun Moon |
spellingShingle |
Doyun Shin Youngyeon Kim Hee Sun Moon Fate and toxicity of spilled chemicals in groundwater and soil environment I: strong acids Environmental Health and Toxicology Strong acid Chemical spill Environmental toxicity Soil and groundwater Sulfuric acid Hydrofluoric acid |
author_facet |
Doyun Shin Youngyeon Kim Hee Sun Moon |
author_sort |
Doyun Shin |
title |
Fate and toxicity of spilled chemicals in groundwater and soil environment I: strong acids |
title_short |
Fate and toxicity of spilled chemicals in groundwater and soil environment I: strong acids |
title_full |
Fate and toxicity of spilled chemicals in groundwater and soil environment I: strong acids |
title_fullStr |
Fate and toxicity of spilled chemicals in groundwater and soil environment I: strong acids |
title_full_unstemmed |
Fate and toxicity of spilled chemicals in groundwater and soil environment I: strong acids |
title_sort |
fate and toxicity of spilled chemicals in groundwater and soil environment i: strong acids |
publisher |
Korean Society of Environmental Helath and Toxicology |
series |
Environmental Health and Toxicology |
issn |
2233-6567 |
publishDate |
2018-12-01 |
description |
We reviewed the chemical/physical properties, toxicity, environmental fate, and ecotoxicity of strong acids in soil and groundwater environments. We recommend that sulfuric acid and hydrofluoric acid be classified as chemicals of priority control based on volumes used, toxicity, carcinogenicity, and past significant spill events. Understanding the behavior and transport of spilled strong acids in soil and groundwater environments requires a multi-disciplinary approach, as they can undergo a variety of geochemical and biochemical reactions with complex geomedia. The toxicity of spilled acid is dependent on the characteristics of the geomedia exposed to the acid and the amount of residual protons following acid–substrate interaction. Soil texture, cation exchange capacity, mineral composition, bedrock type, and aluminum content may be important factors affecting the toxicity of spilled acid in soil-groundwater environments. We expect that the results of this study will contribute preliminary data for future research on chemical spills. |
topic |
Strong acid Chemical spill Environmental toxicity Soil and groundwater Sulfuric acid Hydrofluoric acid |
url |
http://www.e-eht.org/upload/pdf/eht-33-4-e2018019.pdf |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT doyunshin fateandtoxicityofspilledchemicalsingroundwaterandsoilenvironmentistrongacids AT youngyeonkim fateandtoxicityofspilledchemicalsingroundwaterandsoilenvironmentistrongacids AT heesunmoon fateandtoxicityofspilledchemicalsingroundwaterandsoilenvironmentistrongacids |
_version_ |
1725148504388534272 |