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Perchlorate: Problems, detection, and solutions

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ENVIRONMENTAL FORENSICS
卷 2, 期 4, 页码 301-311

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TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1006/enfo.2001.0059

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perchlorate; solid rocket fuel; groundwater contamination; hyperthyroidism; bioremediation

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The perchlorate anion (ClO4-) is produced when the solid salts of ammonium, potassium, and sodium perchlorate, and perchloric acid dissolve in water. Ammonium perchlorate, used in solid rocket engine fuels, has a limited shelf life and must periodically be replaced. Before 1997, perchlorate could not be readily detected in groundwater at concentrations below 100 mug/L, until the California Department of Health Services developed an acceptable analytical method that lowered the detection limit to 4 mug/L. Subsequently, groundwater containing perchlorate were soon encountered in several western states, and contamination became apparent in Colorado River water. Most perchlorate salts have high water solubilities; concentrated solutions have densities greater than water. Once dissolved, perchlorate is extremely mobile, requiring decades to degrade. Health effects from ingesting low dosage perchlorate-contaminated water are not well known: it interferes with the body's iodine intake, causing an inhibition of human thyroid production. Contaminated surface and groundwater treatment may require bio- and/or phytoremediation technologies. Perchlorate in groundwater is relatively unretarded; it probably travels by advection. Therefore, it may be used as a tracer for hydrocarbon and metal contaminants that are significantly more retarded. Possible forensic techniques include chlorine isotopes for defining multiple or commingled perchlorate plumes. (C) 2001 AEHS.

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