1991
DOI: 10.1002/etc.5620101203
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Technical basis for establishing sediment quality criteria for nonionic organic chemicals using equilibrium partitioning

Abstract: The purpose of this review paper is to present the technical basis for establishing sediment quality criteria using equilibrium partitioning (EqP). Equilibrium partitioning is chosen because it addresses the two principal technical issues that must be resolved: the varying bioavailability of chemicals in sediments and the choice of the appropriate biological effects concentration. The data that are used to examine the question of varying bioavailability across sediments are from toxicity and bioaccumulation ex… Show more

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Cited by 1,209 publications
(733 citation statements)
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“…We used the following equilibrium partitioning theory equation [30] to calculate the concentration of triclosan in the interstitial water (C w ) of the upper 2 cm of the low-and high-triclosan-treated mesocosms.…”
Section: Comparison With Aqueous Lc50smentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We used the following equilibrium partitioning theory equation [30] to calculate the concentration of triclosan in the interstitial water (C w ) of the upper 2 cm of the low-and high-triclosan-treated mesocosms.…”
Section: Comparison With Aqueous Lc50smentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The important message supported by all these studies is, however, that during a labile SOM enrichment situation, such as associated with the occurrence and sedimentation of a phytoplankton bloom, accumulation of sediment-associated contaminants increases. This phenomenon will be overlooked if methods based on equilibrium partitioning (EPT) (DiToro, Zarba, Hansen, Berry, Swartz, Cowan et al, 1991) are used to predict bioaccumulation from sediments. Enhanced contaminant bioaccumulation stimulated by enrichment with high quality SOM has in most studies been explained by various macrofaunal feeding responses, such as selective ingestion of contaminated food particles (e.g.…”
Section: Bioaccumulation Of Pyrenementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The maximum chemical activity (a max ) of a solid HOC can be estimated from its melting temperature (T m , K) and the ambient temperature (T, K) according to Yalkowsky et al [6], assuming the entropy of melting to be 56 J mol À1 K À1 (i.e., Walden's rule) a max ¼ e 6:8Âð1À Tm T Þ (1) As seen from Equation 1, HOCs that are solid at a given ambient temperature have an a max below 1, and a max decreases with increasing melting temperature. Chemical activity (a HOC , dimensionless) can be related to the concentration (C HOC , mol L À1 ) via a compound-and medium-specific activity coefficient (g HOC , L mol À1 ) [7] a HOC ¼ C HOC Â g HOC (2) Chemical activity is an established concept in physical chemistry and the basis for the equilibrium partitioning theory that is often used to link total soil and sediment concentrations to actual concentrations in organisms [8]. More recently, various passive sampling techniques have been developed to measure chemical activity [2,9,10], and passive dosing techniques have been developed to control chemical activity in laboratory tests [11][12][13].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%