Elemental Concentrations in Roadside Dust Along Two National Highways in Northern Vietnam and the Health-Risk Implication
Author(s) -
Thai Ha Phi,
Pham Minh Chinh,
Doan Danh Cuong,
Luong Thi Mai Ly,
Nguyen Van Thinh,
Phong K. Thai
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
archives of environmental contamination and toxicology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.827
H-Index - 109
eISSN - 1432-0703
pISSN - 0090-4341
DOI - 10.1007/s00244-017-0477-7
Subject(s) - environmental science , road dust , heavy metals , pollution , environmental chemistry , hazard , risk assessment , range (aeronautics) , health risk , ecotoxicology , environmental protection , environmental engineering , environmental health , particulates , chemistry , ecology , engineering , medicine , computer security , organic chemistry , computer science , biology , aerospace engineering
There is a need to assess the risk of exposure to metals via roadside dust in Vietnam where many people live along the road/highways and are constantly exposed to roadside dust. In this study, we collected dust samples at 55 locations along two major Highways in north-east Vietnam, which passed through different land use areas. Samples were sieved into three different particle sizes and analyzed for concentrations of eight metals using a X-ray fluorescence instrument. The concentrations and environmental indices (EF, I geo ) of metals were used to evaluate the degree of pollution in the samples. Among different land uses, industrial areas could be highly polluted with heavy metals in roadside dust, followed by commerce and power plants. Additionally, the traffic density probably played an important role; higher concentrations were observed in samples from Highway No. 5 where traffic is several times higher than Highway No. 18. According to the risk assessment, Cr poses the highest noncarcinogenic risk even though the health hazard index values of assessed heavy metals in this study were within the acceptable range. Our assessment also found that the risk of exposure to heavy metals through roadside dust is much higher for children than for adults.
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