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Arsenic
Chromium VI Dense Nonaqueous Phase Liquids (DNAPLs) 1,4-Dioxane Mercury MTBE Perchlorate POPs PCBs TCE Other Contaminants
Chemistry and Behavior Arsenic exists in two distinct crystalline forms known as yellow arsenic and metallic arsenic. Yellow arsenic has a relatively low density (3.9 g/cc), is metastable, extremely volatile, and readily degrades to its metallic form. The low density implies an As4 structure that is similar to P4. The metallic form is a tin-white mineral that quickly tarnishes to dark gray. Metallic arsenic crystals have a density of 5.73 g/cc, are very brittle, and are good conductors of heat and poor conductors of electricity. Elemental arsenic is not common in nature. Arsenic's principal ores are sulfides (As2S3, As4S4, and FeAsS), and arsenic sulfides are almost invariably found with other metal sulfides. The hydrogen form of arsenic is arsine, which is a poisonous gas. Arsenic also forms oxide compounds. Arsenic trioxide (As2O3) is a transparent crystal or white powder that is slightly soluble in water and has a specific gravity of 3.74. Arsenic pentoxide (As2O5) is a white amorphous solid that is very soluble in water, forming arsenic acid. It has a specific gravity of 4.32. The most common forms of arsenic in groundwater are their oxy-anions, arsenite (As+3) and arsenate (As+5). Under moderately reducing conditions, arsenite is the predominant species. In oxygenated water, arsenate is the predominant species. Both anions are capable of adsorbing to various subsurface materials, such as ferric oxides and clay particles. Ferric oxides are particularly important to arsenate fate and transport as ferric oxides are abundant in the subsurface and arsenate strongly adsorbs to these surfaces in acidic to neutral waters. An increase in the pH to an alkaline condition will cause both arsenite and arsenate to desorb. Hence, they can be expected to be very mobile in an alkaline environment. The arsenic oxy-anions are also sensitive to redox conditions, and the speciation differential between them will change with changing redox (Henkel and Polette 1999). Arsenic also forms organic compounds. Source: Arsenic in Ground Water of the Willamette Basin, Oregon
ATSDR Toxicological Profile for Arsenic Environmental Chemistry of Arsenic
Handbook of Elemental Speciation, II: Species in the Environment, Food, Medicine and Occupational Health Covers the speciation of elements from aluminum to zinc, including arsenic, chromium, and mercury.
This document provides a brief overview of the dynamics of chemical processes that govern contaminant transport and speciation during water exchange across the ground-water/surface-water transition zone and presents results from a field study examining the fate of arsenic during ground-water discharge into a shallow lake at a contaminated site.
The examination of soils and plants that have had 44 or more years of ground contact with chromated copper arsenate (CCA) provided a unique opportunity to study long-term migration of CCA constituents at several sites. Natural Remediation of Arsenic Contaminated Ground Water Associated with Landfill Leachate This fact sheet describes results of studies by the U.S. Geological Survey at the Saco Municipal Landfill, Saco, Maine. The source of arsenic in ground water and effects of landfill leachate on arsenic concentration in ground water are described.
This report presents metal partition coefficients for the surface water pathway and for the source model used in the multimedia, multi-pathway, multi-receptor exposure and risk assessment (3MRA) technology under development by U.S. EPA. Literature searches, statistical methods, geochemical speciation modeling, and expert judgment were used to provide reasonable estimates of partition coefficients for antimony, arsenic, barium, beryllium, cadmium, chromium, cobalt, copper, lead, molybdenum, mercury, methylated mercury, nickel, selenium, silver, thallium, tin, vanadium, and zinc. Relation of Arsenic, Iron, and Manganese in Ground Water to Aquifer Type, Bedrock Lithogeochemistry, and Land Use in the New England Coastal Basins Rock-Bound Arsenic Influences Ground Water and Sediment Chemistry Throughout New England Both stream sediment chemistry and the solubility and mobility of arsenic in ground water in bedrock are influenced by host-rock arsenic concentrations. Stream sediment chemistry and the distribution of geologic units are useful parameters to predict the areas of greatest concern for elevated arsenic in ground water and to estimate the likely levels of human exposure to elevated arsenic in drinking water in New England; however, the extreme local variability of arsenic concentrations in ground water from these rock sources indicates that arsenic concentrations in ground water are affected by other factors in addition to arsenic concentrations in rock. |