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第六本电子书:Soil and Water Pollution Monitoring, Protection and Remediation
CONTENTS
1. Introduction: Spread and Distribution of Hazardous
Chemicals in Soils and Water – A Global Problem
1.1. Diagnosis and prognosis of the distribution
Uri Mingelgrin and Ahmed Nasser
Mohamed Tawfic Ahmed
2. Fate and Behavior of Anthropogenic Pollutants in Soils
and Water
2.1. Fundamental Issues in Sorption Related to Physical
Joseph J. Pignatello
2.2. The role of humic substances in the fate of anthropogenic
organic pollutants in soil with emphasis on endocrine
Elisabetta Loffredo and Nicola Senesi
Herbert E. Allen and Colin R. Janssen
2.4. The metal uptake and accumulation in fish living
Barbara Jezierska and Maágorzata Witeska
Preface............................................................................................................ xi
Acknowledgements..................................................................................... xvii
Contributors ................................................................................................. xix
v
of contaminants in the geosphere................................................. ..3
1.2. Persistent organic pollutants in Egypt - an overview.................25
and Biological Remediation of Soils.............................................41
disruptor compounds ....................................................................69
2.3. Incorporating bioavailability into criteria for metals ................93
in polluted waters.........................................................................107
3. Advances in Chemical and Biological Techniques
for Environmental Monitoring and Predicting
3.1. Sensoristic approach to biological damage
Luigi Campanella and Cecilia Costanza
Guenther Proll, Jens Tschmelak, Joachim Kaiser,
Peter Kraemmer, Frank Sacher, Jan Stien and Guenther Gauglitz
3.3. Genetically engineered microorganisms for pollution
Shimshon Belkin
3.4. Some advances in environmental analytics
Agata Kot-Wasik and Jacek NamieĞnik
Anna G. Mignani, Andrea A. Mencaglia
and Leonardo Ciaccheri
Hao Zhang and William Davison
3.7. On conceptual and numerical modeling of flow
and transport in groundwater with the aid of tracers:
Jaroslaw Kania, Kazimierz Rozanski, Stanislaw Witczak
and Andrzej Zuber
4. Novel Physico-Chemical Techniques of Soil and Water
Protection and Remediation
4.1. Current and future in situ treatment techniques for the
remediation of hazardous substances in soil, sediments,
Robert A. Olexsey and Randy A. Parker
and risk assessment......................................................................117
monitoring ....................................................................................147
and monitoring..............................................................................161
3.5. Fiber optic system for water spectroscopy................................175
3.6. Predicting metal uptake by plants using DGT technique ........187
a case study...................................................................................199
and groundwater............................................
4.2. Long-term performance of permeable reactive barriers:
lessons learned on design, contaminant treatment, longevity,
Robert W. Puls
Irena Twardowska, Joanna Kyziol, Yoram Avnimelech,
Sebastian Stefaniak and Krystyna Janta-Koszuta
Irina V. Perminova, Natalia A. Kulikova, Denis M. Zhilin,
Natalia Yu. Grechischeva, Dmitrii V. Kovalevskii, Galina
F. Lebedeva, Dmitrii N. Matorin, Pavel S. Venediktov,
4.5. Metal binding by humic substances and dissolved
Yona Chen, Pearly Gat, Fritz H. Frimmel
4.6. The effect of organic matter from brown coal on
Piotr Skáodowski, Alina Maciejewska
and Jolanta Kwiatkowska
Galina K. Vasilyeva, Elena R. Strijakova
and Patrick J. Shea
4.8. Adsorption of anions onto sol-gel generated double
Natalia I. Chubar, Valentyn A. Kanibolotskyy,
Volodymyr V. Strelko, Volodymyr S. Kouts
and Tetiana O. Shaposhnikova
Fritz H. Frimmel and Tusnelda E. Doll
Andrey I. Konstantinov, Vladimir A. Kholodov,
and Gudrun Abbt-Braun
Valery S. Petrosyan
performance monitoring and cost – an overview......................221
organic matter derived from compost .......................................275
bioavailability of heavy metals in contaminated soils ..............299
4.7. Use of activated carbon for soil bioremediation.......................309
hydrous oxides............................................................................. .323
4.3. Using abundant waste and natural materials for soil
and groundwater protection against contamination
with heavy metals: Prospects and areas of application ........... 231
4.4. Mediating effects of humic substances in the contaminated
environments: Concepts, results, and prospects.......................249
4.9. Xenobiotic pharmaceuticals in water and methods
to prevent their appearance in drinking water: Photolytic
and Photocatalytic Degradation of Pharmaceuticals ...............339
4.10. UV/VIS light-enhanced photocatalysis for water
Jan Hupka, Adriana Zaleska, Marcin Janczarek,
Ewa Kowalska, Paulina Górska and Robert Aranowski
Dinesh O. Shah and Monica A. James
Kenneth S. Sajwan, Siva Paramasivam, Ashok K. Alva
and Shivendra V. Sahi
5.1. Phytoremediation and phytotechnologies: a review
Nelson Marmiroli, Marta Marmiroli and Elena Maestri
5.2. Constructed wetlands and their performance
for treatment of water contaminated with arsenic
Ulrich Stottmeister, Sasidhorn Buddhawong, Peter Kuschk,
Arndt Wiessner and J rgen Mattusch
5.3. Disposal of sewage effluent and biosolids in eucalyptus
Pinchas Fine, Nir Atzmon, Fabrizio Adani, and Amir Hass
Thomas Vanek, Ales Nepovim, Radka Podlipna,
Anja Hebner, Zuzana Vavrikova, Andre Gerth,
Hardmuth Thomas and Stanislav Smrcek
5.5. Floating aquatic macrophytes as a decontamination
Cinzia Forni , Caterina Patrizi and Luciana Migliore
5. Biosystems for Non-Destructive Remediation
and Immobilization of Pollutants in Soils, Sediments
and Detoxification of Industrial Wastes
treatment and protection ............................................................351
4.12. Fly ash-organic byproduct mixture as soil amendment ..........387
for the present and the future.....................................................403
and heavy metals..........................................................................417
plantations: a lysimeter simulation study .................................433
5.4. Phytoremediation of explosives in toxic wastes ........................455
tool for antimicrobial drugs........................................................467
5.6. Plant tolerance to heavy metals, a risk for food toxicity
or a means for food fortification with essential metals:
Avi Golan-Goldhirsh
6. Assembled Plant and Microbial Technologies
for Bioremediation of Pollutants
6.1. Ecoremediation. Cooperation between plants and soil
Michel Tissut , Muriel Raveton and Patrick Ravanel
6.2. Anaerobic dehalogenation of halogenated organic
compounds: novel strategies for bioremediation
Max M. Häggblom, Donna E. Fennell, Young-Beom Ahn,
Beth Ravit, and Lee J. Kerkhof
6.3. Molecular tools for microbial remediation - contaminants
Eliora Z. Ron
6.4. Role of mycorrhizal fungi in phytoremediation
and toxicity monitoring of heavy metal rich industrial
Katarzyna Turnau, Elzbieta Orlowska, Przemyslaw Ryszka,
Szymon Zubek, Teresa Anielska, Stefan Gawronski
and Anna Jurkiewicz
6.5. Biodegradation of petroleum hydrocarbons
Krzysztof Ulfig, Wioletta PrzystaĞ, GraĪyna Páaza
and Korneliusz Miksch
7. Management strategies for large-area contaminated sites
7.1. Integrated management strategy for complex groundwater
Grzegorz Malina, Janusz Krupanek, Judith Sievers, Jochen
Grossmann, Jeroen ter Meer and Huub H.M. Rijnaarts
the Allium Schoenoprasum model .............................................479
microorganisms, molecular aspects and limits .........................489
of contaminated sediments..........................................................505
uptake, metabolism and biosensing ...........................................523
by keratinolytic fungi ..................................................................553
contamination at a megasite scale ..............................................567
wastes in Southern Poland..........................................................533
7.2. Management options for regionally contaminated
Holger Weiss, Birgit Daus, Susanne Heidrich, Arno Kaschl,
Mario Schirmer, Peter Wycisk, Jochen Grossmann
and Martin Keil
aquifers: a case study at Bitterfeld, Germany ..........................579
Subject Index .............................................................................................. 591
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