Determination of Spatial Chromium Contamination of the Environment around Industrial Zones

This study was conducted to determine the spatial levels of chromium contamination of water, agricultural soil, and vegetables in the leather tanning industrial areas using spectrophotometric methods. The results showed elevated accumulation of total Cr ranging from 10.85±0.885 mg/L to 39.696±0.326 ...

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Main Authors: Dereje Homa, Ermias Haile, Alemayehu P. Washe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2016-01-01
Series:International Journal of Analytical Chemistry
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/7214932
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spelling doaj-93a0cb092834461fb1f428c88515c59f2020-11-24T21:00:35ZengHindawi LimitedInternational Journal of Analytical Chemistry1687-87601687-87792016-01-01201610.1155/2016/72149327214932Determination of Spatial Chromium Contamination of the Environment around Industrial ZonesDereje Homa0Ermias Haile1Alemayehu P. Washe2Department of Chemistry, Hawassa University, 05, Hawassa, EthiopiaDepartment of Chemistry, Hawassa University, 05, Hawassa, EthiopiaDepartment of Chemistry, Hawassa University, 05, Hawassa, EthiopiaThis study was conducted to determine the spatial levels of chromium contamination of water, agricultural soil, and vegetables in the leather tanning industrial areas using spectrophotometric methods. The results showed elevated accumulation of total Cr ranging from 10.85±0.885 mg/L to 39.696±0.326 mg/L, 16.225±0.12 mg/Kg to 1581.667±0.122 mg/Kg, and 1.0758±0.05348 mg/Kg to 11.75±0.206 mg/Kg in water, agricultural soil, and vegetable samples, respectively. The highest levels of chromium (VI) found from the speciation study were 2.23±0.032 mg/Kg and 0.322±0.07 mg/L in soil and water samples, respectively, which decreased with distance from the tannery. Among the vegetables, the highest load of Cr(VI) was detected in onion root (0.048±0.065 mg/Kg) and the lowest (0.004±0.007 mg/Kg) in fruit of green pepper. The detected levels of Cr in all of the suggested samples were above the WHO permissible limits. The variations of the levels Cr(III) and Cr(VI) contamination of the environment with distance from the tannery were statistically significant (p=0.05). Similarly, significant difference in the levels of Cr among the tested vegetables was recorded. The levels increased with decreasing distance from the effluent channel.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/7214932
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dereje Homa
Ermias Haile
Alemayehu P. Washe
spellingShingle Dereje Homa
Ermias Haile
Alemayehu P. Washe
Determination of Spatial Chromium Contamination of the Environment around Industrial Zones
International Journal of Analytical Chemistry
author_facet Dereje Homa
Ermias Haile
Alemayehu P. Washe
author_sort Dereje Homa
title Determination of Spatial Chromium Contamination of the Environment around Industrial Zones
title_short Determination of Spatial Chromium Contamination of the Environment around Industrial Zones
title_full Determination of Spatial Chromium Contamination of the Environment around Industrial Zones
title_fullStr Determination of Spatial Chromium Contamination of the Environment around Industrial Zones
title_full_unstemmed Determination of Spatial Chromium Contamination of the Environment around Industrial Zones
title_sort determination of spatial chromium contamination of the environment around industrial zones
publisher Hindawi Limited
series International Journal of Analytical Chemistry
issn 1687-8760
1687-8779
publishDate 2016-01-01
description This study was conducted to determine the spatial levels of chromium contamination of water, agricultural soil, and vegetables in the leather tanning industrial areas using spectrophotometric methods. The results showed elevated accumulation of total Cr ranging from 10.85±0.885 mg/L to 39.696±0.326 mg/L, 16.225±0.12 mg/Kg to 1581.667±0.122 mg/Kg, and 1.0758±0.05348 mg/Kg to 11.75±0.206 mg/Kg in water, agricultural soil, and vegetable samples, respectively. The highest levels of chromium (VI) found from the speciation study were 2.23±0.032 mg/Kg and 0.322±0.07 mg/L in soil and water samples, respectively, which decreased with distance from the tannery. Among the vegetables, the highest load of Cr(VI) was detected in onion root (0.048±0.065 mg/Kg) and the lowest (0.004±0.007 mg/Kg) in fruit of green pepper. The detected levels of Cr in all of the suggested samples were above the WHO permissible limits. The variations of the levels Cr(III) and Cr(VI) contamination of the environment with distance from the tannery were statistically significant (p=0.05). Similarly, significant difference in the levels of Cr among the tested vegetables was recorded. The levels increased with decreasing distance from the effluent channel.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/7214932
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AT ermiashaile determinationofspatialchromiumcontaminationoftheenvironmentaroundindustrialzones
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