Contamination, source attribution, and potential health risks of heavy metals in street dust of a metropolitan area in Southern Vietnam

被引:0
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作者
Nguyen Duy Dat
Van-Truc Nguyen
Thi-Dieu-Hien Vo
Xuan-Thanh Bui
Manh-Ha Bui
Ly Sy Phu Nguyen
Xuan-Cuong Nguyen
Anh Thi-Kim Tran
Thi-Tinh-Au Nguyen
Yun-Ru Ju
Thi-Minh-Trang Huynh
Duy-Hieu Nguyen
Hiep-Nghia Bui
Chitsan Lin
机构
[1] Ho Chi Minh City University of Technology and Education,Faculty of Chemical & Food Technology
[2] Saigon University,Department of Environmental Sciences
[3] Nguyen Tat Thanh University,Faculty of Environmental and Food Engineering
[4] Vietnam National University Ho Chi Minh (VNU-HCM),Key Laboratory of Advanced Waste Treatment Technology
[5] Ho Chi Minh City University of Technology (HCMUT),Faculty of Environment and Natural Resources
[6] University of Science,Faculty of Environment
[7] Vietnam National University,Center for Advanced Chemistry, Institute of Research and Development
[8] Duy Tan University,Faculty of Environmental Chemical Engineering
[9] Duy Tan University,Department of Safety, Health and Environmental Engineering
[10] National United University,Graduate Institute of Applied Geology
[11] National Central University,College of Maritime
[12] National Kaohsiung University of Science and Technology,Department of Environmental Engineering
[13] Dayeh University,Department of Marine Environmental Engineering Engineering
[14] National Kaohsiung University of Science and Technology,undefined
关键词
Street dust; Heavy metals; Risk assessment; Enrichment factor; Source attribution;
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This study investigates distribution, pollution indices, and potential risk assessment for human health and ecology of eight heavy metals in twenty-five street dust samples collected from metropolitan area—Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. Results showed that Zn was of the highest concentration (466.4 ± 236.5 mg/kg), followed by Mn (393.9 ± 93.2 mg/kg), Cu (153.7 ± 64.7 mg/kg), Cr (102.4 ± 50.5 mg/kg), Pb (49.6 ± 21.4 mg/kg), Ni (36.2 ± 15.4 mg/kg), Co (7.9 ± 1.9 mg/kg), and Cd (0.5 ± 0.5 mg/kg). The principal component analysis revealed that three sources of heavy metals measured in street dust include vehicular activities (32.38%), mixed source of vehicular and residential activities (26.72%), and mixture of industrial and natural sources (20.23%). The geo-accumulation index values showed levels of non-pollution to moderately pollution for Mn and Co; moderately pollution for Ni; moderately to strongly pollution for Cd, Cr, and Pb; and strongly pollution for Cu and Zn. The potential ecological risk values of all sampling sites were close to the high-risk category. Zn (28.9%), Cu (25.4%), and Mn (24.4%) dominantly contributed to the ecological risk. For non-carcinogenic risk, the hazard quotient values for both children and adults were within a safety level. For carcinogenic risk, the TCRChildren was about 3 times higher than TCRAdults, but still within a tolerable limit (1 × 10−6 to 1 × 10−4) of cancer risk. Cr was a major contribution to potential risks in humans. Such studies on heavy metal in street dust are crucial but are still limited in Vietnam/or metropolitan area in Southeast Asia. Therefore, this study can fill the information gap about heavy metal contaminated street dust in a metropolitan area of Vietnam.
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页码:50405 / 50419
页数:14
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