1,965 research outputs found

    Application of a plant bioassay for the evaluation of ecotoxicological risks of heavy metals in sediments affected by mining activities

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    Purpose. The objective of this work was to evaluate the effectiveness of a plant bioassay (Phytotoxkit®) for screening ecotoxicological risks in sediments affected by mining activities. Materials and methods A total of 42 sediment samples affected by mining activities were studied, including 39 sediment samples fromthe Sierra Minera, Spain, an area affected by old extraction procedures, and three sediments from an area affected by opencast mining. These three samples were then mixed with limestone filler at 10, 20 and 30 %, providing nine stabilised samples. The total and soluble metal(loid) content (As, Cd, Cu, Fe, Pb and Zn) was determined in all samples, and the Phytotoxkit® bioassay was applied to determine the ecotoxicological effect of this procedure. Results and discussion The stabilised material had a neutral pH and low soluble metal(loid) concentration, similar to that of samples in which a natural attenuation process had taken place because of mixing with surrounding carbonate-rich materials. An ecotoxicological survey identified the low toxicity levels of the stabilised samples

    Trace elements contamination in an abandoned mining site in a semiarid zone

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    The distribution of trace elements throughout mining areas is an important issue because abandoned tailings can be a major source of environmental pollution. The aim of this study was to identify the trace element content, hydric dispersion ways and its reception areas in selected zones of the abandoned mining district of Sierra Minera Cartagena-La Unión. The results obtained allowed to establish points affected by primary, secondary and tertiary contamination, according to their proximity to contamination sources, as a function of its chemical and mineralogical composition. Applied GIS methodology allowed visualisation and confirmation of established conceptual model

    Trace element accumulation in plants from an aridic area affected by mining activities

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    Trace element contamination has been a serious problem in the vicinity of abandoned mine sites. In the studied area, mining activities have produced great amounts of wastes, characterized by high trace elements content, acidic pH and minerals from supergene alteration. Trace elements have been dispersed, both downstream and downslope from the mine mainly due, mainly, to surface run-off. Trace elements hydric mobilization usually takes place during the rainy season, an important pollution route in the studied area. A wide range of techniques have been proposed to remediate soils polluted by trace elements. Among them, phytoremediation-based technologies could provide a long-lasting solution. The aimof thisworkwas to determine trace element concentration in roots and leaves of five plant species (Limonium carthaginens, Arthrocnemum macrostachyum, Dittrichia viscosa, Glaucium flavum and Zygophyllum fabago) growing in soils polluted by mining activities in order to determine which part of the plants accumulate heavymetals to the greatest extent. Themetal concentrations in plants varied with plant species. Plant accumulation results showed that Z. fabago could act as an accumulator for Fe, and A. macrostachyum could accumulate in Fe, As and Mn. The other plant species collected from the mining sites were tolerant to trace element contamination

    Geochemical and mineralogical characteristics of percolates and its evaporates from Technosols before and after limestone filler stabilisation

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    The chemistry of waters is recognized as a relevant monitoring tool when assessing the adverse effects of acid mine drainage. The weathering of sulphide minerals produces a great variety of efflorescences of soluble sulphate salts. These minerals play an important role for environmental pollution, since they can be either a sink or a source for acidity and trace elements. This communication deals with the leachability of potentially toxic elements (PTE) eluting from technosols formed from soils affected by mining activities and limestone filler. A total of three contaminated soils affected by opencast mining were selected and mixed with limestone filler at three percentages: 10 %, 20 % and 30 %, providing nine stabilised samples. These samples were stored in containers and moistened simulating rainfall. The percolates obtained were collected, and the PTEs content (As, Cd, Cu, Fe, Pb and Zn) was determined. Evaporation-precipitation experiments were carried out in these waters, and the mineralogical composition of efflorescences was evaluated. The study area is heavily polluted as a result of historical mining and processing activities, producing large amount of wastes, characterised by high trace elements content and acidic pH. The results obtained for the percolates after the rain episode showed that, before the stabilization approach, waters had an acidic pH, high electrical conductivity and high PTEs content. When these soils were mixed with 10, 20 and 30 % of limestone filler, the pH was neutral and the soluble trace element content strongly decreased, being under the detection limit when limestone percentage was 20 % and 30 %. The mineralogical composition of efflorescences before the stabilisation approach showed that predominant minerals were copiapite, followed by gypsum and bilinite. Other soluble sulphates were determined in lower percentage, such as hexahydrite, halotriquite or pickeringite. After the mixing with 10 % of limestone filler, the evaporates were mainly composed by gypsum and halite. Other minerals such as starkeyite (MgSO4·4(H2O), boyleite ((Zn,Mg)SO4·4H2O), tachyhidrite (CaMg2Cl6·12H2O) or bischofite (MgCl2) were quantified in low percentages. After mixing with 20 % and 30 % of limestone filler, main minerals were gypsum and halite, the presence of other phases being scarce. The addition of limestone filler to soils polluted by potentially toxic elements represents a useful and low impact strategy for reducing the soluble fractions of As, Cd, Cu, Fe, Pb and Zn. M.H.C. acknowledges the financial support of the Comunidad Autonóma de la Región de Murcia , Spain (Fundación Séneca, 19888/GERM/15

    Weathering processes in waste materials from a mining area in a semiarid zone

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    Chemical and mineralogical characterization of waste materials present in an abandoned Pb, Zn–Ag mining site (SE, Spain) was carried out. In unaltered rocks, the mineralogy is characterized by plagioclase, pyroxene, magnetite, ilmenite, amphibole, biotite and quartz. Trace-element contents of these samples represent unaltered values. In mine-waste materials, pH ranged from acidic to slightly acidic and trace-element content was generally high, especially for Pb and Zn, although there were also substantial As concentrations. X-ray diffraction results suggested that these samples have a complex mineralogy, including alteration products. Surficial materials in the study area were affected by weathering processes, generating supergene assemblages, including Fe and Mn oxides and hydroxides, carbonates, hydrated sulfates and jarosite. Knowledge of the geochemical processes that took place in the past and whichare still taking place provide an important tool for assessing associated environmental problems in this area

    Cost Optimisation for Minimizing the Visual Impact of Ornamental Stone Quarrying. A Case Study in Murcia Region

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    Quarrying of ornamental stone has adverse effects that are both visual and environmental. This paper aims to develop a methodology for minimising the costs associated with reducing the visual impact of ornamental stone quarrying. This study uses digital topographical maps of the study zone and a GPS and GIS application to calculate the extent of the area affected by quarrying activities for each altitude designated in the work plan and to calculate the extent of the potential visual impact. The results obtained applying the proposed methodology for the selected area suggested that the potential visual impact is minimal for an altitude of 520 metres, this being the optimal point for the observer. When altitude increases, the potential visual impact increases and the optimal point for the observer diminishes until the highest impact altitude (740 m) is readied. The optimal point that the exploitation should reach is that at which the values of the diagram generated by the (%) area of potential visual impact and area of exploitation (%) intersect. The methodology allows the optimal altitude to be determined for mining exploitations and helps assess the viability of a given exploitation from an environmental point of view

    Monitoring salinization processes in soils by using a chemical degradation indicator

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    The main aim of this work is to progress in the study of desertification processes in Mediterranean regions in the framework of DESERTNET project by means of the execution of pilot studies and development of evaluation models. This paper shows the results of an investigation on the degradation processes of soils carried out in the Murcia Region (SE, Spain). Specifically, salinization problems in Murcia Region were evaluated by means of two chemical degradation indicators, salinization state and salinization rate. We define chemical degradation indicator as the representative value of an observed chemical phenomenon in soil which produce its degradation. Chemical degradation indicators were calculated in order to simplify the interpretation of all the complex processes involved in environmental monitoring. The results obtained showed that in some areas an increase in salinization processes is taking place. On the other hand, there are only a few points with high a risk of salinization, obtaining similar results in the two periods of time studied

    Integrated photonic tunable basic units using dual-drive directional couplers

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    "© 2019 Optical Society of America. One print or electronic copy may be made for personal use only. Systematic reproduction and distribution, duplication of any material in this paper for a fee or for commercial purposes, or modifications of the content of this paper are prohibited"[EN] Photonic integrated circuits based on waveguide meshes and multibeam interferometers call for large-scale integration of Tunable Basic Units (TBUs) that feature beam splitters and waveguides. This units are loaded with phase actuators to provide complex linear processing functionalities based on optical interference and can be reconfigured dynamically. Here, we propose and experimentally demonstrate, to the best of our knowledge, for the first time, a thermally actuated Dual-Drive Directional Coupler (DD-DC) design integrated on a silicon nitride platform. It operates both as a standalone optical component providing arbitrary optical beam splitting and common phase as well as a low loss and potentially low footprint TBU. Finally, we report the experimental demonstration of the first integrated triangular waveguide mesh arrangement using DD-DC based TBUs and provide an extended analysis of its performance and scalability. (C) 2019 Optical Society of America under the terms of the OSA Open Access Publishing AgreementEuropean Research Council (ERC ADG-2016UMWP-Chip, ERC-POC-2019 FPPAs); Generalitat Valenciana (PROMETEO 2017/017); European Cooperation in Science and Technology (COST Action CA16220 EUIMWP.).Pérez-López, D.; Gutierrez Campo, AM.; Sánchez-Gomáriz, E.; Dasmahapatra, P.; Capmany Francoy, J. (2019). Integrated photonic tunable basic units using dual-drive directional couplers. Optics Express. 27(26):38071-38086. https://doi.org/10.1364/OE.27.03807138071380862726Soref, R. (2006). The Past, Present, and Future of Silicon Photonics. IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics, 12(6), 1678-1687. doi:10.1109/jstqe.2006.883151Somekh, S., Garmire, E., Yariv, A., Garvin, H. L., & Hunsperger, R. G. (1974). Channel Optical Waveguides and Directional Couplers in GaAs–Imbedded and Ridged. Applied Optics, 13(2), 327. doi:10.1364/ao.13.000327Pérez, D., Gasulla, I., Capmany, J., & Soref, R. A. (2016). Reconfigurable lattice mesh designs for programmable photonic processors. Optics Express, 24(11), 12093. doi:10.1364/oe.24.012093Clements, W. R., Humphreys, P. C., Metcalf, B. J., Kolthammer, W. S., & Walsmley, I. A. (2016). Optimal design for universal multiport interferometers. Optica, 3(12), 1460. doi:10.1364/optica.3.001460Zhuang, L., Roeloffzen, C. G. H., Hoekman, M., Boller, K.-J., & Lowery, A. J. (2015). Programmable photonic signal processor chip for radiofrequency applications. Optica, 2(10), 854. doi:10.1364/optica.2.000854Pérez, D., Gasulla, I., Crudgington, L., Thomson, D. J., Khokhar, A. Z., Li, K., … Capmany, J. (2017). Multipurpose silicon photonics signal processor core. Nature Communications, 8(1). doi:10.1038/s41467-017-00714-1Perez-Lopez, D., Sanchez, E., & Capmany, J. (2018). Programmable True Time Delay Lines Using Integrated Waveguide Meshes. Journal of Lightwave Technology, 36(19), 4591-4601. doi:10.1109/jlt.2018.2831008Kogelnik, H., & Schmidt, R. (1976). Switched directional couplers with alternating ΔΒ. IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics, 12(7), 396-401. doi:10.1109/jqe.1976.1069190Schmidt, R. V., & Kogelnik, H. (1976). Electro‐optically switched coupler with stepped Δβ reversal using Ti‐diffused LiNbO3waveguides. Applied Physics Letters, 28(9), 503-506. doi:10.1063/1.88833Alferness, R. C., & Veselka, J. J. (1985). Simultaneous modulation and wavelength multiplexing with a tunable Ti:LiNbO3directional coupler filter. Electronics Letters, 21(11), 466-467. doi:10.1049/el:19850330Sharkawy, A., Shi, S., Prather, D. W., & Soref, R. A. (2002). Electro-optical switching using coupled photonic crystal waveguides. Optics Express, 10(20), 1048. doi:10.1364/oe.10.001048Orlandi, P., Morichetti, F., Strain, M. J., Sorel, M., Melloni, A., & Bassi, P. (2013). Tunable silicon photonics directional coupler driven by a transverse temperature gradient. Optics Letters, 38(6), 863. doi:10.1364/ol.38.000863Pérez, D., & Capmany, J. (2019). Scalable analysis for arbitrary photonic integrated waveguide meshes. Optica, 6(1), 19. doi:10.1364/optica.6.000019Rios, C., Stegmaier, M., Cheng, Z., Youngblood, N., Wright, C. D., Pernice, W. H. P., & Bhaskaran, H. (2018). Controlled switching of phase-change materials by evanescent-field coupling in integrated photonics [Invited]. Optical Materials Express, 8(9), 2455. doi:10.1364/ome.8.002455Zheng, J., Khanolkar, A., Xu, P., Colburn, S., Deshmukh, S., Myers, J., … Majumdar, A. (2018). GST-on-silicon hybrid nanophotonic integrated circuits: a non-volatile quasi-continuously reprogrammable platform. Optical Materials Express, 8(6), 1551. doi:10.1364/ome.8.001551Capmany, J., Domenech, D., & Muñoz, P. (2014). Silicon graphene waveguide tunable broadband microwave photonics phase shifter. Optics Express, 22(7), 8094. doi:10.1364/oe.22.008094Abel, S., Eltes, F., Ortmann, J. E., Messner, A., Castera, P., Wagner, T., … Fompeyrine, J. (2018). Large Pockels effect in micro- and nanostructured barium titanate integrated on silicon. Nature Materials, 18(1), 42-47. doi:10.1038/s41563-018-0208-0Sanchez, L., Lechago, S., Gutierrez, A., & Sanchis, P. (2016). Analysis and Design Optimization of a Hybrid VO2/Silicon2 ×\times 2 Microring Switch. IEEE Photonics Journal, 8(2), 1-9. doi:10.1109/jphot.2016.2551463Qiao, L., Tang, W., & Chu, T. (2017). 32 × 32 silicon electro-optic switch with built-in monitors and balanced-status units. Scientific Reports, 7(1). doi:10.1038/srep42306Zheng, D., Doménech, J. D., Pan, W., Zou, X., Yan, L., & Pérez, D. (2019). 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    Use of limestone filler as a sorbent for the removal of As(V), Pb(II), Cu(II), Zn(II) and Cd(II) in contaminated sites

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    Many of the approaches used to treat soils contaminated by heavy metals are invasive, and do not restore the natural equilibrium of the environment [1]. For this reason, one of procedures used to stabilise heavy metal-contaminated soils in situ is to directly add amendments, which, while they may not totally eliminate toxic elements, help natural retention mechanisms, induce sorption and reduce mobility and bioavailability. In this respect, the use of calcareous materials may be an excellent, eco-friendly way for recovering this type of soils [2], and this communication reports studies made in our laboratory for such a purpose. The influence of different variables in the preparation of mixtures used to stabilize contaminated soils (soil pH, temperature and composition of the contaminated soil / limestone filler) was studied by means of a factorial experimental design. The main interaction effects of the factors obtained on different contaminated soils were used along with the results of the physicochemical and mineralogical characterization in the same data matrix to be analyzed by principal components analysis (PCA). To evaluate the optimal values of the variables, spectroscopic techniques were used to measure the level of leached metals (Pb, Cd, Cu, As, Zn and Fe). The environmental conditions were simulated and controlled by means of a climatic chamber to evaluate simultaneously the processes of geochemical alteration and passivation of the mixture. The results obtained showed that the corresponding factors of the experimental design may be an important source of information to show correlations on some of the most significant variables such as the concentration of metals and, in this way, optimize the use of the in situ stabilizer

    Geochemical and biological characterisation of supergene efflorescences in pollymetallic mining wastes from Portman Bay (SE, Spain)

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    In freshly deposited sulphidic mine tailings, the pH is neutral or slightly alkaline. Due to pyrite oxidation, the pH decreases to values lower than 3 at which acidophilic iron- and sulphur-oxidizing prokaryotes prevail and accelerate the oxidation processes. Portman Bay is heavily polluted as a result of historical mining and processing activities, during which time great amounts of wastes were produced, characterised by a high potentially toxic elements (PTE) content, acidic pH and minerals resulting from supergene alteration. Three soil samples were collected from the most recent exploitation stage, stored in containers for a year and moistened simulating rainfall events. The percolates obtained were collected and naturally evaporated, obtaining three efflorescence samples. The existence of bacterial activity was evaluated by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). C15 sample is characterised by copiapite small crystals generating an homogeneous, porous mass. Inside the mass of copiapite crystals, both pyrite and gypsum were also found. In this sample, a laminae of material fills the pore space. The high carbon content shown in the spectrum of this material permits to characterise it as a biofilm. In the cross section sample of C15, a noticeable lamination of copiapite crystals has been observed, probably originated by dissolution processes. A clear limit between the lamination zone and the upper zone of the efflorescence was noticed, and here arborescent forms are developed. C17 and C18 also presented copiapite crystals, but, unlike C15, they do not present lamination and are characterized by an irregular shape and massive fabric. In C17, small crystals growing in the surface of this material were observed, generating small crusts. According to the spectrum analysis, these crusts are formed by alunogen. In C18, crystals of acicular morphology are present, and appear grouped at certain points. Therefore, out of the three natural efflorescences, biotic activity was only found in C15. This efflorescence differs significantly in morphology and fabric from samples C17 and C18. Besides the morphology, the PTEs content is also different, suggesting that chemical properties of this soil favoured the organic activity. An important factor could be related to a high iron content, since, as demonstrated in similar materials, iron performs a fundamental factor for bioinducted nucleation
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