225
Views
23
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original Articles

Investigations of the chemical distribution of heavy metals in street dust and its impact on risk assessment for human health, case study of Radom (Poland)

ORCID Icon & ORCID Icon
Pages 1907-1926 | Received 19 Mar 2019, Accepted 11 May 2019, Published online: 03 Jun 2019

References

  • Abbasi S, Keshavarzi B, Moore F, et al. 2017. Investigation of microrubbers, microplastics and heavy metals in street dust: a study in Bushehr city, Iran. Environ Earth Sci 76:798
  • Acosta JA, Faz A, Kalbitz K, et al. 2014. Partitioning of heavy metals over different chemical fraction in street dust of Murcia (Spain) as a basis for risk assessment. J Geochem Explor 144:298–305
  • Adamiec E, Jarosz-Krzemińska E, and Wieszała R. 2016. Heavy metals from non-exhaust vehicle emissions in urban and motorway road dusts. Environ Monit Assess 188:369
  • Adamiec E. 2017. Road environments: Impact of metals on human health in heavily congested cities of Poland. Ijerph 14:697
  • Akhter MS, and Madany IM. 1993. Heavy metals in street and house dust in Bahrain. Water Air Soil Pollut 66:111–9
  • Alexander J. 2006. Anbefalte kvalitetskriterier for jord i barnehager, lekeplasser og skolegårder på basert på helsevurderinger [Health-Based Soil Quality Criteria for Day-Care Centers Play-Grounds and Schoolyards]. Nasjonalt Folkehelseinstitutt, Oslo (in Norwegian)
  • Allott RW, Hewitt CN, and Kelly MR. 1990. The environmental half-lives and mean residence times of contaminants in dust for an urban environment: Barrow-in-Furness. Sci Total Environ 93:403–10
  • Bourliva A, Christophoridis C, Papadopoulou L, et al. 2017. Characterization, heavy metal content and health risk assessment of urban road dusts from the historic center of the city of Thessaloniki, Greece. Environ Geochem Health 39:611–34.
  • Charlesworth S, Everett M, McCarthy R, et al. 2003. A comparative study of heavy metal concentration and distribution in deposited street dusts in a large and a small urban area: Birmingham and Coventry, West Midlands, UK. Environ Int 29:563–73.
  • Council Decision. 2002. Council Decision of 19 December establishing criteria and procedures for the acceptance of waste at landfills pursuant to Article 16 of Annex II to Directive 1999/31/EC (2003/33/EC)
  • Czarnowska K. 1996. Total content of heavy metals in parent rocks as reference background levels of soils. Soil Sci Ann 47:43–50 in Polish)
  • De Miguel E, Iribarren I, Chacón E, et al. 2007. Risk-based evaluation of the exposure of children to trace elements in playgrounds in Madrid (Spain). Chemosphere 66:505–13.
  • Dehghani S, Moore F, Keshavarzi B, et al. 2017. Health risk implications of potentially toxic metals in street dust and surface soil of Tehran, Iran. Ecotoxicol Environ Saf 136:92–103.
  • Ferreira-Baptista L, and De Miguel E. 2005. Geochemistry and risk assessment of street dust in Luanda, Angola: A tropical urban environment. Atmos Environ 39:4501–12
  • Gabarrón M, Faz A, and Acosta JA. 2017. Soil or dust for health risk assessment studies in urban environment. Arch Environ Contam Toxicol 73:442–55
  • Gao P, Liu S, Ye W, et al. 2015. Assessment on the occupational exposure of urban public bus drivers to bioaccessible trace metals trough resuspended fraction of settled bus dust. Sci Total Environ 508:37–45.
  • Gope M, Masto RE, George J, et al. 2017. Bioavailability and health risk of some potentially toxic elements (Cd, Cu, Pb and Zn) in street dust of Asansol, India. Ecotox Environ Safe 138:231–41.
  • Gope M, Masto RE, George J, et al. 2018. Tracing source, distribution and health risk of potentially harmful elements (PHEs) in street dust of Durgapur, India. Ecotox Environ Safe 154:280–93.
  • GUS Report. 2018. Statistical offices in Warszawa. Statistical Vademecum of Regional Civil Servant, Radom city. https://warszawa.stat.gov.pl/vademecum/vademecum_mazowieckie/portrety_miast/miasto_radom.pdf (in Polish).
  • Håkanson L. 1980. An ecological risk index for aquatic pollution control. A Sedimentological Approach. Water Res 14:975–1001
  • Hu X, Zhang Y, Luo Y, et al. 2011. Bioaccessibility and health risk of arsenic, mercury and other metals in urban street dusts from a mega-city, Nanjing, China. Environ Pollut 159:1215–21.
  • Huang J, Li F, Zeng G, et al. 2016. Integrating hierarchical bioavailability and population distribution into potential eco-risk assessment of heavy metals in road dust: A case study in Xiandao District, Changsha city, China. Sci Total Environ 541:969–76.
  • Huang M, Wang W, Chan CY, et al. 2014. Contamination and risk assessment (based on bioaccessibility via ingestion and inhalation) of metal(loid)s in outdoor and indoor particles from urban centers of Guangzhou, China. Sci Total Environ 479–480:117–24.
  • Jan R, Roy R, Yadav S, et al. 2018. Chemical fractionation and health risk assessment of particulate matter-bound metals in Pune, India. Environ Geochem Health 40:255–70.
  • Jayarathne A, Egodawatta P, Ayoko GA, et al. 2018. Assessment of ecological and human health risks of metals in urban road dust based on geochemical fractionation and potential bioavailability. Sci Total Environ 635:1609–19.
  • Keshavarzi B, Tazarvi Z, Rajabzadeh MA, et al. 2015. Chemical speciation, human health risk assessment and pollution level of selected heavy metals in urban street dust of Shiraz, Iran. Atmos Environ 119:1–10.
  • Li H, Qian X, Hu W, et al. 2013. Chemical speciation and human health risk of trace metals in urban street dusts from a metropolitan city, Nanjing, SE China. Sci Total Environ 456–457:212–21.
  • Li HH, Chen LJ, Yu L, et al. 2017. Pollution characteristics and risk assessment of human exposure to oral bioaccessibility of heavy metals via urban street dusts from different functional areas in Chengdu, China. Sci Total Environ 586:1076–84.
  • Lin M, Gui H, Wang Y, et al. 2017. Pollution characteristics, source apportionment, and health risk of heavy metals in street dust of Suzhou, China. Environ Sci Pollut Res Int 24:1987–98.
  • Liu E, Yan T, Birch G, et al. 2014. Pollution and health risk of potentially toxic metals in urban road dust in Nanjing, a mega-city of China. Sci Total Environ 476–477:522–31.
  • Luo XS, Ding J, Xu B, et al. 2012. Incorporating bioaccessibility into human health risk assessments of heavy metals in urban park soils. Sci Total Environ 424:88–96.
  • Milestone. 1992. MLS-1200 MEGA, Microwave Digestion System with MDR Technology. Operator Manual and Basic Digestion Programs (in Italy)
  • Ministerie van Volkshuisvesting. 2000. Ruimtelijke Ordening en Milieubeheer. Dutch Target and Intervention Values 2000. http://www.esdat.net/EnvironmentalStandard/Dutch/annexS.12000
  • Mohmand J, Eqani SA, Fasola M, et al. 2015. Human exposure to toxic metals via contaminated dust: Bio-accumulation trends and their potential risk estimation. Chemosphere 132:142–51
  • Mordak R, Tetlak M, and Rawski J. 2008. Strategy of the development of the Radom city for the period 2008–2020. WYG International, Warszawa 2008. http://www.radom.pl/data/other/strategia_rozwoju_miasta_radomia_na_lata.pdf (in Polish).
  • Müller G. 1969. Index of geo-accumulation in sediments of the Rhine River. GeoJournal 2:108–18
  • Pettersen J, and Hertwich EG. 2008. Critical Review: life-cycle inventory procedures for long-term release of metals. Environ Sci Technol 42:4639–47
  • PN-EN 12457-2 2006. Characterization of waste – Leaching – Compliance test for leaching of granular waste materials and sludges. Part 2
  • Regulation of the Minister of Environment. 2016. Regulation of the Minister of Environment on 1 September 2016 on the conduct of the assessment of contamination of the earth surface (Dz. U. item 1395) (in Polish)
  • Rinklebe J, and Shaheen SM. 2017. Redox chemistry of nickel in soils and sediments: A review. Chemosphere 179:265–78
  • Seńczuk W. 2005. Contemporary Toxicology. Polish Medical Publisher PZWL, Warsaw (in Polish)
  • Shi G, Chen Z, Bi C, et al. 2011. A comparative study of health risk of potentially toxic metals in urban and suburban road dust in the most populated city of China. Atmos Environ 45:764–71.
  • Singh AK. 2011. Elemental chemistry and geochemical partitioning of heavy metals in road dust from Dhanbad and Bokaro regions, India. Environ Earth Sci 62:1447–59
  • Sun G, Li Z, Liu T, et al. 2017. Metal exposure and associated health risk to human beings by street dust in a heavily industrialized city of Hunan Province, Central China. Ijerph 14:261.
  • Świetlik R, Strzelecka M, and Trojanowska M. 2013. Evaluation of traffic-related heavy metals emissions using noise barrier road dust analysis. Pol J Environ Stud 22:561–7
  • Świetlik R, Trojanowska M, Strzelecka M, et al. 2015. Fractionation and mobility of Cu, Fe, Mn, Pb and Zn in the road dust retained on noise barriers along expressway – A potential tool for determining the effects of driving conditions on speciation of emitted particulate metals. Environ Pollut 196:404–13.
  • Tang Z, Chai M, Cheng J, et al. 2017. Contamination and health risks of heavy metals in street dust from a coal-mining city in eastern China. Ecotoxicol Environ Saf 138:83–91.
  • Tessier A, Campbell PGC, and Bisson M. 1979. Sequential extraction procedure for the speciation of particulate trace metals. Anal Chem 51:844–51
  • Thorpe A, and Harrison RM. 2008. Sources and properties of non-exhaust particulate matter from road traffic: A review. Sci Total Environ 400:270–82
  • Ure AM, and Davidson CM. 2002. Chemical Speciation in the Environment. Blackwell Science, Oxford
  • Urrutia-Goyes R, Hernandez N, Carrillo-Gamboa O, et al. 2018. Street dust from a heavily-populated and industrialized city: Evaluation of spatial distribution, origins, pollution, ecological risks and human health repercussions. Ecotoxicol Environ Saf 159:198–204.
  • US EPA (US Environmental Protection Agency) 1989. Risk Assessment Guidance for Superfund, Vol. I, Human Health Evaluation Manual (Part A), EPA/540/1-89/002. Office of Emergency and Remedial Response, Washington, DC
  • US EPA (US Environmental Protection Agency) 2001. Risk Assessment Guidance for Superfund, Vol. III – Part A, Process for Conducting Probabilistic Risk Assessment. EPA 540-R-02-002, Washington, DC
  • US EPA (US Environmental Protection Agency). 2002. Supplemental Guidance for Developing Soil Screening Levels for Superfund Sites. Office of Emergency and Remedial Response, OSWER 9355.4-24, Washington, DC
  • US EPA (US Environmental Protection Agency) 2003. Framework for Cumulative Risk Assessment, EPA/630/P-02/001F, Washington, DC
  • US EPA (US Environmental Protection Agency) 2017. Update for Chapter 5 of the Exposure Factors Handbook. Soil and Dust Ingestion. EPA/600/R-17/384F, Washington, DC
  • Van den Berg R. 1995. Human Exposure to Soil Contamination: A Qualitative and Quantitative Analysis Towards Proposals from Human Toxicological Intervention Values. National Institute of Public Health and Environmental Protection, Bilthoven, The Netherlands
  • Wang J, Li S, Cui X, et al. 2016. Bioaccessibility, sources and health risk assessment of trace metals in urban park dust in Nanjing, Southeast China. Ecotox Environ Safe 128:161–70.
  • Wei X, Gao B, Wang P, et al. 2015. Pollution characteristics and health risk assessment of heavy metals in street dusts from different functional areas in Beijing, China. Ecotox Environ Safe 112:186–92.
  • Werkenthin M, Kluge B, and Wessolek G. 2014. Metals in European roadside soils and soil solution – a review. Environ Pollut 189:98–110
  • Yu B, Wang Y, and Zhou Q. 2014. Human health risk assessment based on toxicity characteristic leaching procedure and simple bioaccessibility extraction test of toxic metals in urban street dust of Tianjin, China. PLoS One 9:e92459
  • Zechmeister HG, Hohenwallner D, Riss A, et al. 2005. Estimation of element deposition derived from road traffic sources by using mosses. Environ Pollut 138:238–49.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.