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Chemosphere

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial en inglés
Chemosphere is an international journal designed for the publication of original communications as well as review articles. Chemosphere, as a multidisciplinary journal, offers maximum dissemination of investigations related to all aspects of environmental science. Chemosphere will publish:
• Original communications describing important new discoveries or further developments in important fields of investigation related to the environment and human health
• Reviews, mainly of new developing areas of environmental science
• Special, themed issues on relevant topics.

The following sections and subject fields are included:
Persistent Organic Pollutants and Dioxins
This section is devoted to all scientific aspects of persistent organic pollutants, including monitoring studies in the environment, ecosystem, and people; environmental chemistry; toxicology; epidemiologic investigations; risk assessment; and processes that generate these pollutants and measures to reduce their emissions or concentrations in the environment. Organic pollutants targeted in this section can be of natural or synthetic origin but must be persistent in the environment or in organisms. Although the term "persistent" is somewhat subjective, with such definition, halogenated organic chemicals are of primary interest. Only studies that are of significance to an international audience and include a statistically representative population, sites of particular global interest, or lend themselves to interpretation at the global level should be submitted.

Environmental Chemistry
This section will publish manuscripts dealing with fundamental processes in the environment that are related to dispersion, degradation and alteration of inorganic and organic contaminants of environmental concern focussed on the dynamics of contaminants in environmental compartments such as water, soil/sediment, and air and their interactions with biosphere. Specific topics of interest include:
• Environmental fate studies including transport, biodegradation, bio-accumulation and/or deposition as well as atmospheric (photo)chemical processes, hydrolysis, adsorption/desorption
• Transformation and mineralisation of chemicals e.g. by bio- and photodegradation, redoxprocesses and hydrolysis, bio-accumulation and/or deposition as well as atmospheric (photo)chemical processes, hydrolysis, adsorption/desorption
• Soil and water chemistry focussed on interaction, degradation and speciation aspects of environmental contaminants
• Novel environmental analytical methods including case studies
• Phytoremediation employing new strategies, findings or interpretations of general interest
• Development and application of environmental modelling and quantitative structure-activity relationships to study fate and environmental dynamics
• Monitoring studies presenting new strategies, report of novel contaminants, findings or interpretations of general interest for an international readership. Monitoring studies based on standard methodology, and of regional importance, are not considered. Studies dealing only with nutrients in agricultural ecosystems are not considered.

Environmental Toxicology and Risk Assessment
The Section on Environmental Toxicology and Risk Assessment covers all aspects of toxicology, i.e., the science of adverse effects of chemicals and toxic substances on living organisms including humans, and the scientific assessment of the risk that such adverse effects may occur.

Issues that would be appropriate for consideration include:
• Adverse effects of chemicals and toxic substances in environmental, aquatic and terrestrial, organisms
• Similar studies in experimental organisms (under laboratory conditions)
• Epidemiological studies on effects of chemicals in humans
• Biochemical studies related to mechanisms of adverse effects
• Toxicokinetics and metabolic studies on chemicals related to adverse effects
• Development and validation of testing methods based on living organisms or biological materials
• Biomonitoring of chemicals related to adverse effects
• Occupational chemical hazards and exposure.

Not considered are, e.g., studies which report only concentrations of chemicals in the environment, living organisms, food, other materials etc., or on techniques of remediation of environmental pollution, or on biochemical effects of chemicals non-relevant to toxicology.

Science for Environmental Technology
Closer description
• Advanced water and wastewater treatment process
• Incineration
• Remediation
• Hazardous Waste – industrial chemicals
• Green Chemistry
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

No disponibles.

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Período Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada desde ene. 1972 / hasta dic. 2023 ScienceDirect

Información

Tipo de recurso:

revistas

ISSN impreso

0045-6535

ISSN electrónico

1879-1298

Editor responsable

Elsevier

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Cobertura temática

Tabla de contenidos

Determination of genotoxic effects of copper sulphate and cobalt chloride in Allium cepa root cells by chromosome aberration and comet assays

Mustafa Yıldız; İbrahim Hakkı Ciğerci; Muhsin Konuk; A. Fatih Fidan; Hakan Terzi

Palabras clave: General Medicine; General Chemistry; Environmental Chemistry; Environmental Engineering; Pollution; Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis; Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health.

Pp. 934-938

Photophysical and photochemical properties of the pharmaceutical compound salbutamol in aqueous solutions

Leah G. Dodson; R. Aaron Vogt; Joyann Marks; Christian Reichardt; Carlos E. Crespo-Hernández

Palabras clave: General Chemistry; Environmental Chemistry; General Medicine.

Pp. 1513-1523

Cyanotoxins: Characteristics, production and degradation routes in drinking water treatment with reference to the situation in Serbia

Dijana Pantelić; Zorica Svirčev; Jelica Simeunović; Milka Vidović; Ivana Trajković

Palabras clave: General Chemistry; Environmental Chemistry; General Medicine.

Pp. 421-441

Effect of pH on the toxicity and bioconcentration of sulfadiazine on Daphnia magna

Gitte Gotholdt Anskjær; Cecilie Rendal; Kresten Ole Kusk

Palabras clave: General Medicine; General Chemistry; Environmental Chemistry; Environmental Engineering; Pollution; Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis; Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health.

Pp. 1183-1188

Impact of potassium permanganate on cyanobacterial cell integrity and toxin release and degradation

Jiajia Fan; Robert Daly; Peter Hobson; Lionel Ho; Justin Brookes

Palabras clave: General Chemistry; Environmental Chemistry; General Medicine.

Pp. 529-534

Characterization of biochar-derived dissolved organic matter using UV–visible absorption and excitation–emission fluorescence spectroscopies

Tyler Jamieson; Eric Sager; Céline Guéguen

Palabras clave: General Medicine; General Chemistry; Environmental Chemistry; Environmental Engineering; Pollution; Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis; Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health.

Pp. 197-204

Presence of pesticides in surface water from four sub-basins in Argentina

Eduardo De Gerónimo; Virginia C. Aparicio; Sebastián Bárbaro; Rocío Portocarrero; Sebastián Jaime; José L. Costa

Palabras clave: General Chemistry; Environmental Chemistry; General Medicine.

Pp. 423-431

Tracing changes in atmospheric sources of lead contamination using lead isotopic compositions in Australian red wine

Louise Jane KristensenORCID; Mark Patrick Taylor; Andrew James Evans

Pp. 40-47

Bioaugmentation as a strategy for the remediation of pesticide-polluted soil: A review

Mariusz CycońORCID; Agnieszka Mrozik; Zofia Piotrowska-Seget

Palabras clave: General Medicine; General Chemistry; Environmental Chemistry; Environmental Engineering; Pollution; Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis; Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health.

Pp. 52-71

Quantitative methylene blue decolourisation assays as rapid screening tools for assessing the efficiency of catalytic reactions

Jan Kruid; Ronen Fogel; Janice Leigh Limson

Palabras clave: General Chemistry; Environmental Chemistry; General Medicine.

Pp. 247-252