Enviro Chem Exam 2- Toxic Chemicals and Heavy Metals, Waste (copy)

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31 Terms

1
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Oxidation states of Hg?

  • Harmful: methyl mercury (organic mercury)

  • Common: elemental/metallic Hg

2
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Oxidation states of Cr?

  • Harmful: Cr(VI)

  • Common: Cr(III)

3
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Oxidation states of Pb?

  • Harmful: Pb2+

  • Common: Pb0, Pb(IV)

4
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Oxidation states of As?

  • Harmful: Arsine = AsH3

  • Common inorganic/organic

5
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Toxic effects of Hg?

Neurotoxicity, birth defects, respiratory damage

6
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Toxic effects of Cr?

Carcinogenic, kidney failure, ulcers (stomach, skin, nose lining)

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Toxic effects of Pb?

Organ toxicity, central nervous system, liver damage

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Toxic effects of As?

Cardiovascular disease, cancer, skin disorders

9
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Infamous environmental contamination of Hg?

Minamata disaster – Japan 1956 mercury contaminated water dumped into Minamata bay (locals poisoned by consuming fish)

10
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Infamous environmental contamination of Cr?

Hinkley Groundwater Contamination – 1952-1956 gas company dumped Cr contaminated water around Mt. Hinkley – levels rose to be toxic (highly contaminated) – people affected, lung cancer

11
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Infamous environmental contamination of Pb?

Kabwe Lead Poisoning – Lead/Zn mine in Africa (owned by colonial companies) – toxic waste never cleaned up, eventually got into water, air contamination, health impacts in children and miners

12
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Infamous environmental contamination of As?

Bangladesh Arsenic Poisoning – Early 1990s/200s Arsenic contamination through wells, tapped into contaminated groundwater aquifers (As contaminated)

13
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Remediation efforts/chemistry of Hg?

Bioremediation using plants + microorganisms to modify Hg compounds into less harmful states; chelating agents (EDTA) to complex Hg ions

14
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Remediation efforts/chemistry of Cr?

Precipitate Cr out using iron salts + hydroxide; planting crops to absorb Cr (alfalfa)

15
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Remediation efforts/chemistry of Pb?

Pb + Fe2(SO4)3 à PbFe3 (plumbojarosite) – reduces bioavailability

16
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Remediation efforts/chemistry of As?

Physical methods – combining contaminated soil w/uncontaminated and doing acid washes; microorganisms to degrade As (convert into different forms or absorb); adsorption w/activated alumina or iron oxides

17
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What are the different types of garbage waste?

  • Industrial waste: demolition debris, refinery sludge, construction materials

  • Municipal solid waste: food wastes, disposable goods, used electronics

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How is garbage typically disposed of?

Landfills and incineration

19
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What is the first stage of garbage decomposition?

  • Aerobic bacteria converts nitrogens to nitrates (which has harmful effects)

  • Longest stage; can continue for years

20
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What is the second stage of garbage decomposition?

  • Anaerobic bacteria converts organics into carboxylic acids, carbonic species, and H2

  • Nitrogens are converted into ammonia

  • pH drops to 4-5 as metals are solubilized into leachate

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What is the third stage of garbage decomposition?

  • Different anaerobic bacteria convert organics into CO2 and CH4

22
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What is leachate?

Water has filtered through solid materials and dissolved some of the components/chemicals (like VOCs, bacteria, heavy metals, salts)

23
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Types of recycling?

  • Pre-consumer recycling: using waste generated during manufacturing process

  • Post-consumer recycling: reuse materials recovered from domestic and commercial consumers (ex. aluminum, paper, plastic, glass)

24
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Why is aluminum recycling the most efficient?

  • Can be recycled indefinitely without loss of quality

  • Saves 95% of energy needed to produce new Al

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Why is paper recycling the not as efficient?

  • Saves 25% of energy needed to produce new paper

  • Quality loss over time

26
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What is plastic made up of and why are they so commonly used/produced?

Polymeric organic molecules such as polyethylene and polystyrene (aka. styrofoam); cheap to produce but expensive to recycle and are resistant to degradation

27
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What are the 4 primary techniques of reusing plastics?

  • Reprocess

  • Depolymerize

  • Transform

  • Burn

28
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Reprocessing of plastics?

Most common; re-melt or reshape into a new product (physical) (ex. bottles turned into carpet/clothing fiber)

29
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Depolymerization of plastics?

Breakdown to molecular constituents (chemical); difficult to reuse

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Transform of plastics?

Turned into a lower quality substance to make other materials (chemical) (ex. plastic turned into liquid lubricant)

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Burning of plastics?

Produces energy