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(Reference retrieved automatically from Web of Science through information on FAPESP grant and its corresponding number as mentioned in the publication by the authors.)

Use of diffusive gradient in thin films for in situ measurements: A review on the progress in chemical fractionation, speciation and bioavailability of metals in waters

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Author(s):
Menegario, Amauri Antonio ; Yabuki, Lauren N. Marques ; Luko, Karen S. ; Williams, Paul N. ; Blackburn, Daniel M.
Total Authors: 5
Document type: Review article
Source: Analytica Chimica Acta; v. 983, p. 54-66, AUG 29 2017.
Web of Science Citations: 22
Abstract

Chemical fractionation, speciation analysis and bioavailability of metals and metalloids in waters have received increased attention in recent years. However, this interest is not matched by progress in improving species integrity during standard `grab' sample collection, processing and storage. Time-averaged, low disturbance sampling, in situ, of trace element species, in particular, is a more reliable approach for environmental chemical surveillance and methods based on the diffusive gradients in thin films (DGT) technique stand out as one of the most widely used of the passive sampler classes, and hence will be the primary focus of this review. The DGT technique was initially developed to sample metals and semi-metals in freshwaters, and later was extended to include marine settings as well as the measurement of metal fluxes in sediments/soils. Nowadays, DGT based technologies are used extensively in a variety of geochemical and environmental health research disciplines. This review specifically surveys the application of the DGT measurement for fractionation and speciation analysis (as defined by IUPAC) of metal or metalloids in aqua. Use of DGT in fresh, estuarine and marine waters, as well as effluents has improved the knowledge base of in situ data related to fractionation processes (e.g. labile and inert species; organic and inorganic species; dissolved and nanoparticles), and speciation analysis. This supports not only the calculations underpinning numerous software speciation models for cation and anion behavior, but also our understanding of the bioavailability and toxicity of these species. The measurement of metals by DGT are easy to obtain, which is core to its popular use, but often the results require sophisticated interpretation and a wide spectrum of chemical knowledge to really explain in full, which is why the method has and continues to capture the interest of researchers. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. (AU)

FAPESP's process: 15/50306-4 - Predicting the availability of toxic trace elements in field crops: performance study, and development for new DGT approaches to predict As, Cd and Pb transfer from soils to plants
Grantee:Amauri Antonio Menegário
Support Opportunities: Regular Research Grants
FAPESP's process: 15/03397-4 - Speciation and fractionation of metals (and some metalloids) in water and soil
Grantee:Amauri Antonio Menegário
Support Opportunities: Regular Research Grants