A reply to the discussion by Dr. Bensted of the paper “determination and quantification of total chromium and water soluble chromium content in commercial cements”

1996 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 331-333 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Frías ◽  
M.I.Sánchez de Rojas
1990 ◽  
Vol 73 (5) ◽  
pp. 798-800 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Plessi ◽  
Agar Monzani

Abstract The chromium content of samples of cereals, legumes, oil seeds, and alimentary pastes (In the latter, bioavailable chromium as well) was determined by atomic absorption spectrophotometry. The chromium content in whole cereals differs substantially and Is mostly concentrated In pericarps. Variations occur not only among different types of cereals, but also among cereals of the same type, depending on the areas of origin. Concentration varies substantially even In samples of legumes and oil seeds. The content of bioavailable chromium (ethanol-extractable) Is, In most cases, more than 50% of the total chromium amount. This makes these products particularly Interesting as dietary supplements


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manuel Hernandez Cordoba ◽  
Ignacio Lopez-Garcia ◽  
Juan Jose Marín-Hernández ◽  
Maria Jose Muñoz-Sandoval ◽  
Carmen Perez-Sirvent

<p>The speciation of chromium in waters and leachates obtained from soils and sediments has aroused interest in the last years. The element may be present in two oxidation degrees that have quite different toxicity. While chromium (III) is even essential for human beings due to its role in the metabolism of glucose and lipids, Cr(VI) is toxic due to its oxidant properties. The concentration of chromium in waters is usually of a few micrograms per liter, and the difficulty of carrying out the measurement at such low levels is further increased due to the distribution of the total element in the two mentioned forms. The technique commonly used nowadays for the purpose is inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS), a powerful analytical tool, but expensive both in acquisition and maintenance. Speciation, in addition, requires some type of previous separation or suitable strategy since the signal obtained by ICP-MS depends on the total amount of the metal present.</p><p>Recent advances in microextraction techniques have demonstrated that the determination and speciation is also possible by using electrothermal atomization atomic absorption spectrometry (ETAAS), an analytical technique which is of lesser cost than ICP-MS and is present in most laboratories worldwide. This communication summarizes some recent studies carried out in our laboratory based on the use of dispersive solid-phase microextraction to concentrate chromium. The small volume of liquid extract finally obtained can be injected into the electrothermal atomizer, and a very sensitive chromium determination is achieved. The extreme sensitivity in this way obtained is the consequence of combining the efficient preconcentration step with the sensitivity inherent to ETAAS measurement. Selectivity is also guaranteed by the characteristics of ETAAS. Speciation can be carried out by means of simple previous redox treatments without the need for a chromatographic separation. Three procedures are compared, one of them using graphene oxide as the active micro-solid phase, other based in the use of cellulose, an inexpensive reagent. Both procedures require a centrifugation step to separate the micro-solid phase from the supernatant. The third procedure uses freshly prepared ferrite particles and avoids the centrifugation step since the magnetic characteristics of the solid material permit an easy separation of phases with an external magnet. In all cases, chromium is measured after desorption from the micro-solid phase by a small volume of a suitable reagent. The limits of detection are close to 0.01 micrograms/L. The reliability of the three procedures is checked by using several reference samples with a certified chromium content. Data for the speciation of the metal are also given, a point that may be of practical interest for those involved in risk assessment or toxicity studies, since the dealers of the reference materials only provide the total chromium content.</p>


2013 ◽  
Vol 58 (3) ◽  
pp. 895-897 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Byelikov ◽  
I. Volchok ◽  
V. Netrebko

Abstract It is shown that chromium distribution in the metal base of high-chromium cast irons depends on manganese content. According to the X-ray micro-spectral analysis data with the increase of manganese content from 0.72 to 6.49% chromium content decreased in the near-carbide zones. At the same time chromium content in carbides increased. This process obtained particularly strong development inside eutectic colonies of carbides. As a result of it, when total chromium content in the alloy has been 23%, its concentration in the local zones was 12,3%, thus the necessary level of corrosion resistance has not been provided. The minimal chromium content has to amount 23.2%, at 6.49% Mn and 2.2...2.5% C in order to provide corrosion resistance of high-chromium cast irons


2020 ◽  
Vol 991 ◽  
pp. 178-184
Author(s):  
Zainus Salimin ◽  
Faldy W. Satiyoaji ◽  
Dwi A. Prasetya ◽  
Achmad Chafidz

The tannery industry generally produces trivalent chromium waste (Cr3 +) and hexavalent chromium (Cr6 +). This waste before being released into the environment must meet quality standards according to KEPMENLH no.51 / MENLH / 10/1995 concerning liquid quality standards for industrial activities which says the maximum total chromium content is 0.6 ppm. This study aims to reduce the levels of Chromium in waste produced by the leather tanning industry by using alum coagulants. This research uses simulation waste which is made based on the results of BPPT analysis of waste in the leather tanning industry in Tangerang city, namely CV "Lengtat Tangerang Leather". The method used in this research is coagulation-flocculation with alum as a coagulant and lime as an alum reaction assistant in the form of hydroxide ions. The parameters observed in this study were the pH adjustment and the ratio of alum mass to lime mass. From the results of the study it was found that the decrease in the best chromium content for Cr + 3 occurred at a ratio of 5 and pH 8.2 which resulted in a chromium content of 0.0076 ppm with a decrease in percentage of 99.95%. As for the Cr6 + test, at a ratio of 3 and pH 6.4 the chromium content showed a value of 0.4110 ppm. The lowest chromium level occurs at a ratio of 5 and pH of 5.8 which results in a chromium level of 0.3341 ppm with a decrease percentage of 56.61%.


2012 ◽  
Vol 174-177 ◽  
pp. 1096-1099
Author(s):  
Shu Xuan Wang ◽  
Ning Li ◽  
Fahong Wang ◽  
Bo Li ◽  
Yulong Li

Ferrochrome slag, an essential component in stainless steel, is the by-product of ferrochromium production. The composition of the ferrochrome slag and leaching tests show that the chromium content, 3.68%, is high, although the data of leaching tests under normal conditions is very low. Leaching test was performed on an oscillating shaking table with ratio adjusted to 150r/min at L/S 8 and 80°C, during 5h. The maximum content of water-soluble Cr (Ⅵ) is 2.78μg/g (0.3475 mg/L) from ferrochromium slag under these conditions. The soluble (Cr6+ and Cr3+) content rise in the solidification process,with the increase of ferrochrome slag. The Water-soluble Cr (Cr6+ and Cr3+) under different cured times can’t be detected. The content of ferrochrome slag reached 10% is the best ratio by comprehensive consideration of water-soluble Cr (Ⅵ) of all processes, compressive strength and relevant national standards.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Badal Kumar Mandal ◽  
Raviraj Vankayala ◽  
L. Uday Kumar

The distribution and mobility of chromium in the soils and sludge surrounding a tannery waste dumping area was investigated to evaluate its vertical and lateral movement of operational speciation which was determined in six steps to fractionate the material in the soil and sludge into (i) water soluble, (ii) exchangeable, (iii) carbonate bound, (iv) reducible, (v) oxidizable, and (vi) residual phases. The present study shows that about 63.7% of total chromium is mobilisable, and 36.3% of total chromium is nonbioavailable in soil, whereas about 30.2% of total chromium is mobilisable, and 69.8% of total chromium is non-bioavailable in sludge. In contaminated sites the concentration of chromium was found to be higher in the reducible phase in soils (31.3%) and oxidisable phases in sludge (56.3%) which act as the scavenger of chromium in polluted soils. These results also indicate that iron and manganese rich soil can hold chromium that will be bioavailable to plants and biota. Thus, results of this study can indicate the status of bioavailable of chromium in this area, using sequential extraction technique. So a suitable and proper management of handling tannery sludge in the said area will be urgently needed to the surrounding environment as well as ecosystems.


2021 ◽  
Vol 290 ◽  
pp. 01027
Author(s):  
Huang Tingting

The research was studying the chromium precipitation in faucets which were extracted at ambient temperature of 20 ºC, 40 ºC and 60 ºC by extraction solution, the results showed that in general, the chromium extraction in the faucets increased as the temperature rises. And the chromium extraction in different batches and different samples in the same batch varied greatly, mainly affected by materials and the processing technology. After further analysis, the detection showed that Cr VI in chromium precipitation was between 83% and 103% of the total chromium content. This indicated that Cr VI was the main form of chromium in extraction solution, which will be harmful to human health.


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