Trace elements in coal combustion ash products are potentially hazardous to the environment and some of them have high carcinogenic potency. They also have the potential to bioaccumulate providing the major limiting factor for safe disposal or beneficiation of the coal combustion ash products. The various forms and oxidation states of the trace elements may determine the ultimate environmental fate and health impacts. For example, in case of chromium, the trivalent Cr(III) is an essential nutrient while Cr(VI) is strongly carcinogenic. Moreover, Cr(VI) originates mostly from anthropogenic industrial sources and is classified as a Group A inhalation carcinogen by the US environmental protection agency (EPA), and is also classified as one of ...
Chromium was and is widely used in a number of industrial processes, such as Cr plating, leather tan...
The Unified Bioaccessibility Method (UBM), which simulates the fluids of the human gastrointestinal ...
From ~1830-1968, one of the world’s largest Cr chemical factories operated in Rutherglen, SE Glasgow...
Coal fired power stations are a source of toxic trace elements to the environment. In Australia, ~85...
Abstract:- Coal combustion from power stations is one of the largest contributors of potentially tox...
Coal combustion from power stations is an important anthropogenic contributor of toxic trace element...
Coal combustion from power stations is one of the largest contributors of potentially toxic trace el...
The paper overviews all essential aspects related to Cr behavior during coal combustion and was writ...
Speciation of chromium (Cr) in the fly ash collected from oxyfiring of Victorian brown coal has been...
The bituminous-to-sub-bituminous quality feed coals of thermal power plants contain several environm...
Anion-exchange chromatography with inductively coupled plasma - atomic emission spectrometry (ICP-AE...
Numerous critical reviews have evaluated exposure to toxic and carcinogenic hexavalent chromium (Cr(...
This paper summarises some of the work performed in the Cooperative Research Centre for Coal in Sust...
This project seeks to determine the biogeochemical factors that influence transport of Cr(VI) and ev...
Chromite Ore Processing Residue (COPR) contains high concentrations of hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)),...
Chromium was and is widely used in a number of industrial processes, such as Cr plating, leather tan...
The Unified Bioaccessibility Method (UBM), which simulates the fluids of the human gastrointestinal ...
From ~1830-1968, one of the world’s largest Cr chemical factories operated in Rutherglen, SE Glasgow...
Coal fired power stations are a source of toxic trace elements to the environment. In Australia, ~85...
Abstract:- Coal combustion from power stations is one of the largest contributors of potentially tox...
Coal combustion from power stations is an important anthropogenic contributor of toxic trace element...
Coal combustion from power stations is one of the largest contributors of potentially toxic trace el...
The paper overviews all essential aspects related to Cr behavior during coal combustion and was writ...
Speciation of chromium (Cr) in the fly ash collected from oxyfiring of Victorian brown coal has been...
The bituminous-to-sub-bituminous quality feed coals of thermal power plants contain several environm...
Anion-exchange chromatography with inductively coupled plasma - atomic emission spectrometry (ICP-AE...
Numerous critical reviews have evaluated exposure to toxic and carcinogenic hexavalent chromium (Cr(...
This paper summarises some of the work performed in the Cooperative Research Centre for Coal in Sust...
This project seeks to determine the biogeochemical factors that influence transport of Cr(VI) and ev...
Chromite Ore Processing Residue (COPR) contains high concentrations of hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)),...
Chromium was and is widely used in a number of industrial processes, such as Cr plating, leather tan...
The Unified Bioaccessibility Method (UBM), which simulates the fluids of the human gastrointestinal ...
From ~1830-1968, one of the world’s largest Cr chemical factories operated in Rutherglen, SE Glasgow...