2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2012.02.015
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Levels, isomer profiles and chiral signatures of particle-bound hexabromocyclododecanes in ambient air around Shanghai, China

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Cited by 38 publications
(15 citation statements)
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References 44 publications
(115 reference statements)
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“…HBCDD has estimated half-lives of 3 days in air and 2e25 days in water, which makes it susceptible to long-range transport (Covaci et al, 2006). Evidence of the long-range transport of HBCDD comes from its detection in air from regions that are far removed from sources including in Europe (Remberger et al, 2004), Asia (Hu et al, 2011;Li et al, 2012) and the Arctic (de Wit et al, 2010;Xiao et al, 2012). Lee et al (2010) also report close to 100% detection of HBCDD at global sites under the GAPS network.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…HBCDD has estimated half-lives of 3 days in air and 2e25 days in water, which makes it susceptible to long-range transport (Covaci et al, 2006). Evidence of the long-range transport of HBCDD comes from its detection in air from regions that are far removed from sources including in Europe (Remberger et al, 2004), Asia (Hu et al, 2011;Li et al, 2012) and the Arctic (de Wit et al, 2010;Xiao et al, 2012). Lee et al (2010) also report close to 100% detection of HBCDD at global sites under the GAPS network.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Zhang et al (2013a) suggested using the ratio of g-to a-HBCD in abiotic samples to detect recent contaminations with HBCD in the environment, because of the decreasing percentage of g-HBCD with time. Other abiotic matrices such as soil (Li et al, 2011), air (Li et al, 2012) and water (Harrad et al, 2009a) show a similar composition to sediment, with g-HBCD being the dominant diastereomer, although mostly in a decreased portion compared with tHBCD. However, some studies found a-HBCD to be the dominant diastereomer in abiotic matrices (Li et al, 2012;Meng et al, 2012).…”
Section: Environmental Concentrationsmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…Other abiotic matrices such as soil (Li et al, 2011), air (Li et al, 2012) and water (Harrad et al, 2009a) show a similar composition to sediment, with g-HBCD being the dominant diastereomer, although mostly in a decreased portion compared with tHBCD. However, some studies found a-HBCD to be the dominant diastereomer in abiotic matrices (Li et al, 2012;Meng et al, 2012). Law et al (2014) have recently summarized several publications concerning the time trends of environmental HBCD concentrations.…”
Section: Environmental Concentrationsmentioning
confidence: 85%
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