6 results on '"Helmus R"'
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2. A method for the determination of fullerenes in soil and sediment matrices using ultra-high performance liquid chromatography coupled with heated electrospray quadrupole time of flight mass spectrometry
- Author
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Carboni, Andrea, Helmus, R., Parsons, John R., Kalbitz, Karsten, and de Voogt, Pim
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Passive sampler housing and sorbent type determine aquatic micropollutant adsorption and subsequent bioassay responses.
- Author
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de Baat, M.L., Narain-Ford, D.M., de Weert, J., Giesen, D., Beeltje, H., Hamers, T., Helmus, R., de Voogt, P., and Kraak, M.H.S.
- Subjects
PASSIVE sampling devices (Environmental sampling) ,ENVIRONMENTAL sampling ,ORGANIC water pollutants ,WATER pollution ,WATER quality - Abstract
The combination of integrative passive sampling and bioassays is a promising approach for monitoring the toxicity of polar organic contaminants in aquatic environments. However, the design of integrative passive samplers can affect the accumulation of compounds and therewith the bioassay responses. The present study aimed to determine the effects of sampler housing and sorbent type on the number of chemical features accumulated in polar passive samplers and the subsequent bioassay responses to extracts of these samplers. To this end, four integrative passive sampler configurations, resulting from the combination of polar organic chemical integrative sampler (POCIS) and Speedisk housings with hydrophilic-lipophilic balance and hydrophilic divinylbenzene sorbents, were simultaneously exposed at reference and contaminated surface water locations. The passive sampler extracts were subjected to chemical non-target screening and a battery of five bioassays. Extracts from POCIS contained a higher number of chemical features and caused higher bioassay responses in 91% of cases, while the two sorbents accumulated similar numbers of features and caused equally frequent but different bioassay responses. Hence, the passive sampler design critically affected the number of accumulated polar organic contaminants as well as their toxicity, highlighting the importance of passive sampler design for effect-based water quality assessment. [Display omitted] • Four passive sampler housing-sorbent configurations were deployed in the field. • Passive sampler extracts were subjected to non-target screening and bioassays. • The two sorbents caused equally frequent but different bioassay responses. • POCIS housing showed higher compound accumulation and bioassay responses. • Sampler design critically affects the toxicity detection of polar micropollutants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Perfluoroalkyl substances in the Maltese environment – (I) surface water and rain water.
- Author
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Sammut, G., Sinagra, E., Helmus, R., and de Voogt, P.
- Subjects
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FLUOROALKYL compounds , *MALTESE , *RAINWATER , *ARCHIPELAGOES , *SOLID phase extraction , *LIQUID chromatography-mass spectrometry - Abstract
The presence of perfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) in rain water on the Maltese Islands is reported here for the first time and an extensive survey of these substances in surface water also reported. The Maltese archipelago lies at the centre of the Mediterranean Sea and consists of three main inhabited islands: Malta, Gozo and Comino. Surface water was collected from 41 valleys during the months of February and March 2015 at the peak of the wet season. Rain water was collected during the months of December 2014, February, August, September and October 2015. PFASs were extracted from the water samples using solid phase extraction and the extracts were then analysed using ultra performance liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry in tandem (UPLC-MS/MS). All surface and rain water samples were contaminated with at least one PFAS. PFOS (< LOD – 8.6 ng/L) and PFOA (ND – 16 ng/L) were the two major PFASs being detected in 100% and 95% of the surface waters respectively. The ΣPFAS concentrations in rain water ranged between 0.38 ng/L (1st October 2015) and 6 ng/L (21st February 2015). The Maltese archipelago is surrounded by sea and disconnected from any other mainland; therefore the results confirm that remote environments can become contaminated by PFASs from rain events depending on wind prevailing trajectories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Soil self-cleaning capacity: Removal of organic compounds during sub-surface irrigation with sewage effluent.
- Author
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Narain-Ford, D.M., van Wezel, A.P., Helmus, R., Dekker, S.C., and Bartholomeus, R.P.
- Subjects
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SEWAGE , *SEWAGE irrigation , *RHIZOSPHERE , *WATER table , *ORGANIC compounds , *SOILS , *WATER supply - Abstract
• Sub-surface irrigation (SSI) not only combats drought but also removes most organic compounds. • Of 133 targets 89 were retrieved in the field, non-detected have low persistency. • Persistent hydrophobic organics significantly build up next to infiltration pipes. • After a drought period the SSI system needs more time to reset concentrations than after a normal year. • First study to assess direct effluent reuse in real-scale SSI system for broad range of compounds. Globally, the reuse of treated sewage effluent for irrigation purposes is increasingly encouraged as a practical solution against the mismatch between the demand for and availability of freshwater resources. The reuse of sewage effluent for sub-surface irrigation (SSI) in agriculture serves the dual purpose of supplying water to crops and diminishing emissions of contaminants of emerging concern (CoECs) into surface water. To investigate such reuse, in a real scale cropland with SSI using sewage effluent, from September 2017 to March 2019 including the extremely dry year 2018, residues were followed of 133 CoECs as related to their physicochemical properties and quantified by liquid chromatography coupled to high-resolution mass spectrometry. Of the 133 target CoECs, 89 were retrieved in the field, most non-detect CoECs have low persistency. During the growing season with sub-surface irrigation, CoECs spread to the shallow groundwater and rhizosphere. Significantly lower concentrations are found between infiltration pipes as compared to directly next to the pipes in shallow groundwater for all persistency-mobility classes. CoECs belonging to the class pm (low persistency and low mobility) or class PM (high persistency and high mobility) class show no change amongst their removal in the rhizosphere and groundwater in a dry versus normal year. CoECs belonging to the class pM (low persistency and high mobility) show high seasonal dynamics in the rhizosphere and shallow groundwater, indicating that these CoECs break down. CoECs of the class Pm (high persistency and low mobility) only significantly build up in the rhizosphere next to infiltration pipes. Climatic conditions with dry summers and precipitation surplus and drainage in winter strongly affect the fate of CoECs. During the dry summer of 2018 infiltrated effluent is hardly diluted, resulting in significantly higher concentrations for the CoECs belonging to the classes pM and Pm. After the extremely dry year of 2018, cumulative concentrations are still significantly higher, while after a normal year during winter precipitation surplus removes CoECs. For all persistency-mobility classes in the shallow groundwater between the pipes, we find significant removal efficiencies. For the rhizosphere between the pipes, we find the same except for Pm. Next to the pipes however we find no significant removal for all classes in both the rhizosphere and shallow groundwater and even significant accumulation for Pm. For this group of persistent moderately hydrophobic CoECs risk characterization ratio's were calculated for the period of time with the highest normalized concentration. None of the single-chemical RCRs are above one and the ΣRCR is also far below one, implying sufficiently safe ambient exposures. Overall the deeper groundwater (7.0–11.8 m below soil surface) has the lowest response to the sub-surface irrigation for all persistency-mobility. When adopting a SSI STP effluent reuse system care must be taken to monitor the CoECs that are (moderately) hydrophobic as these can build up in the SSI system. For the deeper groundwater and for the discharge to the surface water, we find significant removal for the pM and the PM class but not for other classes. In conclusion, relatively high removal efficiencies are shown benefiting the surface waters that would otherwise receive the STP effluent directly. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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6. The dissolution and microbial degradation of mobile aromatic hydrocarbons from a Pintsch gas tar DNAPL source zone.
- Author
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Van Leeuwen, J.A., Hartog, N., Gerritse, J., Gallacher, C., Helmus, R., Brock, O., Parsons, J.R., and Hassanizadeh, S.M.
- Abstract
Source zones containing tar, a dense non-aqueous phase liquid (DNAPL), can contaminate groundwater for centuries. A common occurrence of tar is at former Pintsch gas factories. Little is known about the composition and fate of contaminants dissolving from Pintsch gas tar DNAPL. In this study, we determined the composition and water-soluble characteristics of mobile aromatic hydrocarbons and their biodegradation metabolites in the DNAPL contaminated groundwater at a former Pintsch gas tar plant. We assessed the factors that determine the fate of observed groundwater contaminants. Measured values of density (1.03–1.06 kg/m3) and viscosity (18.6–39.4 cP) were found to be relatively low compared to common coal tars. Analysis showed that unlike common coal tars phenanthrene is the primary component rather than naphthalene. Moreover, it was found that Pintsch gas tar contains a relatively high amount of light molecular aromatic hydrocarbon compounds, such as benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene and xylenes (BTEX). Less commonly reported components, such as styrene, ethyltoluenes, di-ethylbenzene, 1,2,4,5-tetramethylbenzene, were also detected in water extracts from Pintsch gas tar. Moreover, 46 relatively hydrophilic metabolites were found within the tar samples. Metabolites present within the tar suggest biodegradation of mobile aromatic Pintsch gas tar compounds occurred near the DNAPL. Based on eleven detected suspect metabolites, a novel anaerobic biodegradation pathway is proposed for indene. Overall, our findings indicate that Pintsch gas tar has higher invasive and higher flux properties than most coal tars due to its relatively low density, low viscosity and, high content of water-soluble compounds. The partitioning of contaminants from multi-component DNAPL into the aqueous phase and re-dissolution of their slightly less hydrophobic metabolites back from the aqueous phase into the DNAPL is feasible and demonstrates the complexity of assessing degradation processes within a source zone. Unlabelled Image • Phenanthrene is the primary component in Pintsch gas tar, rather than naphthalene. • 47 metabolites from anaerobic biodegradation of aromatic hydrocarbons were found. • Detected metabolites suggest active anaerobic biodegradation at pool zone conditions. • A novel biodegradation pathway is proposed, based on 11 novel indene metabolites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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