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Read the articleAUTHORS
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Michel HOENIG: Doctorate from Lille University of Science and Technology (USTL) - Associate supervisor at the Center for Veterinary and Agrochemical Studies and Research (CERVA) of the Belgian Ministry of Agriculture, Tervuren
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Patrick THOMAS: Engineer from the Conservatoire national des arts et métiers (CNAM) - Doctorate from Lille University of Science and Technology (USTL) - Head of the Metallic Micropollutants Laboratory, Water and Environment Department, Institut Pasteur, Lille
INTRODUCTION
The term "environmental protection" currently represents a set of human activities whose ultimate aim should be to prevent its degradation or, at the very least, maintain it in its current state. In this case, the environment should not only be considered from the human point of view, but also as a global ecosystem. If we look at long-term problems, we have to realize that most of the phenomena involved are chemical in nature, and that the pathways to identifying and eliminating them lie precisely in this discipline. Chemical analysis therefore plays a very important role: only data obtained under appropriate conditions and interpreted in a reasoned manner can guarantee the success of subsequent interventions. In the past, we have witnessed situations where the link between the various stages of environmental protection studies underestimated analytical control; even today, we cannot say that the use of chemical analysis has reached its rightful level in this field. What we need to talk about is analytical strategy, represented by the following points:
rigorous definition of the problem to be addressed ;
problem-oriented sample selection (sampling) ;
proper sample preparation ;
quantitative measurement of the elements associated with the initial problem ;
validation and evaluation of results ;
interpretation of results and conclusion.
From the point of view of finding the initial situation, it is necessary to take as a basis a set of analyses characterized by a high number of element determinations in various samples, in the knowledge that their major element composition (matrix) is unknown and/or variable. It should be remembered here that this matrix is precisely responsible for the greater or lesser difficulty of the analysis, due to the effects it can impose during sample preparation or when measuring the element in question (analyte). According to this criterion, environmental samples can be classified according to the analytical difficulty caused by the presence of a complex matrix and/or very low concentrations:
drinking water, surface water, rainwater, wastewater ;
soil, sediment, sludge, suspended solids in water and atmospheric dust;
animal tissue, excrement, insects ;
plant tissues (particularly difficult due to the variable presence of silica); sea water (low concentrations to be determined) and biological fluids (blood, urine, milk: complex and/or highly variable matrices);
...
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Preparation of environmental samples for mineral analysis
Bibliography
References
Website
American site devoted entirely to sample preparation (Duquesne University)
Standardization
Unlike the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in the United States, French standardization (AFNOR) was only very late in taking an interest in the preparation of environmental samples. This is probably due to the excessive diversity of samples and the division of standardization committees. However, some of them, such as metallurgy, fertilizers and fertilizer materials, drew up standards as early as 1965 to 1975. In...
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