4.7 Article

Pollution effect assessment of industrial activities on potentially toxic metal distribution in windowsill dust and surface soil in central China

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 759, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.144023

Keywords

Industrial activities; Windowsill dust; Surface soil; Toxic metals; Spatial distribution; China

Funding

  1. Key Projects on the Causes and Control of Heavy Atmospheric Pollution [DQGG0107]

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The study identified serious Cd and As pollution as a result of industrial activities in Anyang, China, with concentrations exceeding background values in windowsill dust and surface soil. Industrial production and traffic emissions were found to influence the concentration of PTMs in windowsill dust and surface soil, posing larger non-carcinogenic risks for children. This suggests that industrial activities have caused significant harm to residents in the area.
Boundaries between industrial and urban areas in developing countries are not clearly defined, but pollution effect assessment of industrial activities on potentially toxic metal (PTM) distribution in these areas has rarely been investigated. Fifteen villages and eight communities surrounding the industrial areas from Anyang, China, were chosen as research objects in this study. A total of 78 windowsill dust and 78 surface soil samples were collected to determine the pollution levels, spatial distribution and risk indices of nine PTMs. PTM concentrations (expect Cr, Mn and Ni in surface soil) in the surveyed region were higher than the local soil background values. Amongst these PTMs, serious Cd and As pollution was discovered, and Cd and As in windowsill dust and surface soil exceeded the background value by 73.00 and 9.59, 9.74 and 10.92 times, respectively. Compared with the Igeo in surface soil, a large degree of variation in Igeo for the different PTMs was found in windowsill dust. The interpolated spatial distribution of dust Cr, Zn, Pb, Cd and soil Mn, Ni and Cu had a gradually decreasing pollution trend fromthe south to the north due to the prevailingwind directions inwinter in the study area. Results ofmultivariate statistics reflected that industrial production and traffic emission affected the concentration of PTMs in windowsill dust and surface soil. The non-carcinogenic risks for children (soil: 12.4; dust: 19.2) were larger than those for adults (soil: 1.02; dust: 1.51). This finding suggested that industrial activities caused serious harmto the residents around industrial areas. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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