Testing the relation between pre-sample purge extent, parameter stabilization and dissolved contaminant concentration at a DNAPL site

Author(s):  
Agnes Reka Mathe ◽  
Artur Kohler ◽  
Jozsef Kovacs

<p>Groundwater contamination resulted from anthropogenic activity often proves to be a persistent feature of the affected groundwater regime. The contaminated groundwater body is a complex and dynamic entity commonly called the “contaminant plume”, it is characterized by spatially dependent concentration pattern that exhibits temporal changes. In order to assess the actual state of the plume contemporaneous sampling of all assigned monitoring wells is necessary. These contemporaneous samplings should provide compatible results, just like subsequent sampling campaigns. Differences between consecutive concentration patterns help to understand the temporal behavior of the plume.</p><p>A monitoring well provides direct contact between the water originating from of the screened aquifer and the atmosphere. The water within the well may undergo physicochemical changes, between sampling events, mainly when aquifer water movement at the screened section of the well is slow. Among diverse alterations the stagnant water within the well may be depleted in volatile components, enriched in dissolved oxygen therefore the chemistry of the stagnant water within the well is typically not representative of the aquifer water. These alterations would not confine to the water contained inside of the well casing, they will diffuse into the aquifer at the screened section. The extent of this altered zone is hard to calculate, as it depends on a number of factors. The sampling procedure should ensure that representative formation water is sampled instead of altered water.</p><p>It is well known for long that sampling procedure can affect sample integrity. Most standardized sampling procedures consist a pre-sampling purge phase to avoid the sampling of stagnant water instead of aquifer water. Most procedures aim to define the necessary extent of the purging in well volumes (from three-five to twenty volumes). The other approach is to purge the well until all or some of certain field parameters (such as pH, specific electric conductivity, temperature, dissolved oxygen, oxidation-reduction potential, turbidity) stabilize, however definitions for parameter stabilization criteria are not uniform. Parameter stabilization approach is used mostly, when low-flow sampling technique is applied. In addition to the stabilization of field parameters low-flow technique requires water level stabilization as well.</p><p>The test site is a chlorinated hydrocarbon contaminated site, the affected subsurface consists of layered sandy aquifers and silt-clay aquicludes. Three monitoring wells were repeatedly tested quarterly on five sampling occasions. Field parameters were measured in a flow through cell and recorded regulary. Three samples were taken during purging: at the beginning of the purging; after extraction of three well volumes; and when field parameters are stabilized. The samples were analysed for organic and inorganic components.</p><p>Results indicate that at wells with lower contaminant concentrations insufficient purging may result in overestimating the proportion of contaminant degradation products over primer contaminant components.</p>

of storage as short as possible, only; 24 h should not be ex­ ceeded. Table III comprises the most important criteria for valid static and dynamic sampling. It seems that both the guide of Warren Springs, U.K. and the VDI-Guideline might be a useful base to describe commonly accepted sampling procedures aiming at a standardization of sampling which might be a first step for a harmonization of olfactometric measurements in the different laboratories and countri es. REFERENCES (1) BULLEY, N.R. and D. PHILLIPS (1980). Sensory evaluation of agricul­ tural odours: A critical review. Can. Agric. Eng. 22, 107 - 112. (2) HENRY, J.G. and R. GEHR (1980). Odour control: An operator's guide. Journal WPCF 52, 2523 - 2537. (3) ROOS, C., J.A. DON and J. SCHAEFER (1984). Characterization of odour-polluted air. In: Proc.Int.Symp., Soc. Beige de Filtr. (eds.), 25-27 April 1984, Louvain-La-Neuve, Belgium, pp. 3 - 22. (4) BAKER, A.R. and R.C. DOERR (1959). Methods of sampling and storage of air containing vapors and gases. Int.J.Air Poll. 2, 142 - 158. (5) SCHUETTE, F.J. (1967). Plastic bags for collection of gas samples. Atmosph.Environm. 1, 515 - 519. (6) SCHODDER, F. (1977T. Messen von Geruchsstoffkonzentrationen, Erfassen von Geruch. Grundl. Landtechnik 27, 73 - 82. (7) CORMACK, D., T.A. DORLING and B.W7J. LYNCH (1974). Comparison of tech­ niques for organoleptic odour-intensity assessment. Chem.Ind. (Lon­ don) no. 2, 857 - 861. (8) SCHUETZLE, D., T.J. PRATER and S. RUDDELL (1975). Sampling and anal­ ysis of emissions from stationary sources. I. Odour and total hydro­ carbons. APCA Journal 25, 925 - 932. (9) WAUTERS, E., E. WALRAVENS, E. MUYLLE and G. VERDUYN (1983). An evalu­ ation of a fast sampling procedure for the trace analysis of volatile organic compounds in ambient air. Environm.Monitor.Assessm. 3, 151-160. (10) LACHENMAYER, U. and H. KOHLER (1984). Untersuchungen zur Neuentwick-lung eines Olfaktometers. Staub - Reinhalt. Luft 44, 359 - 362. (11) BERNARD, F. (1984). Simplified methods of odour measurement: Indus­ trial application and interest for administrative control. Proc. Int. Symp., Soc. Beige de Filtr. (eds.), 25 - 27 April 1984, Louvain-La-Neuve, Belgium, pp. 139 - 150. (12) GILLARD, F. (1984). Measurement of odours by dynamic olfactometry. Application to the steel and carbonization industries. Proc.Int.Symp., Soc. Beige de Filtr. (eds.), 25 - 27 April 1984, Louvain-La-Neuve, Belgium, pp. 53 - 86. (13) MANNEBECK, H. (1975). Tragbare Olfaktometer. VDI-Bericht 226, 103-105. (14) BEDBOROUGH, D.R. (1980). Sensory measurement of odours. In: Odour Control - a concise guide, F.H.H. Valentin and A.A. North (eds.), Warren Springs Laboratories, Stevenage, Hertfordshire, U.K., pp. 17-30. (15) THIELE, V. (1984). Olfaktometrie an einer Emissionsquelle - Ergebnis-se des VDI-Ringvergleichs. Staub - Reinhalt. Luft 44, 342 - 351. (16) DUFFEE, R.A., J.P. WAHL, W. MARRONE and J.S. NADERT1973). Defining and measuring objectionable odors. Internat. Pollution Eng. Congress, Philadelphia, paper no 25a, pp. 192 - 201.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francisco Freitas ◽  
Mónica Alves

AbstractBackgroundGuidelines for venous blood sampling procedure (phlebotomy) discourage tourniquet use whenever possible. Here, we aimed to assess the Biomedical Scientists capability of not using the tourniquet in phlebotomy, which we hypothesized to be equal to 50% of the patients attended, and identifying the most frequent venipuncture site.Materials and MethodsWe selected and assigned two (BMS) with the same age (41 years) and experience (20 years) to record ten phlebotomy days, the first with prioritized and the latter with non-prioritized patients. In a simple record form, each acquired daily data for the number of attended patients, age and gender, the frequency of non-tourniquet usage and the punctured vein. To test our work hypothesis we used the two-tailed single sample t-test (p < 0.05). Differences between age-group means and non-tourniquet use means by each BMS were tested by two-tailed t-test for independent means (p < 0.05).ResultsIn 10 phlebotomy days 683 patients were attended, with males representing 43,2% of the population. We found no statistically difference between age-group means. The combined capability of non-tourniquet use was 50,5%, which did not differ from our null hypothesis, but the individual group-means were statistically different, being 33% and 66.9% in the prioritized vs non-prioritized group. The medial cubital vein was the most prone to be punctured (77,7%).ConclusionsWe have shown that performing phlebotomies without tourniquet use is possible and desirable in at least half of the attended patients, though being more limited in specific group populations. Our results provide room for quality improvement in the laboratory pre-analytical phase.Key points summaryWe assessed the capability of Biomedical Scientists not using the tourniquet in real life blood sampling procedures for diagnostic purposes.Blood was collected from at least half of the attended patients without tourniquet use.Biomedical Scientists were able to prioritize the antecubital veins without tourniquet application (medial cubital vein the most prone to be punctured - 78% of attempts).


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pieter Mestdagh ◽  
Michel Gillard ◽  
Marc Arbyn ◽  
Jean-Paul Pirnay ◽  
Jeroen Poels ◽  
...  

AbstractNasopharyngeal sampling has been the preferential collection method for SARS-CoV-2 diagnostics. Alternative sampling procedures that are less invasive and do not require a healthcare professional would be more preferable for patients and health professionals. Saliva collection has been proposed as such a possible alternative sampling procedure. We evaluated the sensitivity of SARS-CoV-2 testing on two different saliva collection devices (spitting versus swabbing) compared to nasopharyngeal swabs in over 2500 individuals that were either symptomatic or had high-risk contacts with infected individuals. We observed an overall poor sensitivity in saliva for SARS-CoV-2 detection (30.8% and 22.4% for spitting and swabbing, respectively). However, when focusing on individuals with medium to high viral load, sensitivity increased substantially (97.0% and 76.7% for spitting and swabbing, respectively), irrespective of symptomatic status. Our results suggest that saliva cannot readily replace nasopharyngeal sampling for SARS-CoV-2 diagnostics but may enable identification of cases with medium to high viral loads.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (11) ◽  
pp. 31-46
Author(s):  
Nicola L. Ritter

This article provides a content analysis of the research methodologies used in quantitative and mixed-methods articles in the top five educational technology journals between 2012 and 2013. These articles represented a total of 32,131 sampling procedures and statistical techniques recorded from 1,171 articles – the largest research synthesis of research methodologies in field of educational technology to date. Results indicate quantitative methods continue to dominate the field as a whole, yet specific journals appear to favor certain research methods over others. Most authors did not report the type of sampling procedure used in their investigations (617 articles). Fewer researchers reported score reliability estimates using their own data – with only 420 articles reporting reliability coefficients. Findings also suggest few authors reported informationally-adequate statistics. Recommendations for best statistical practices and implications for the field of educational technology are discussed.


1991 ◽  
Vol 35 ◽  
pp. 313-318
Author(s):  
Kiyosi Izumi ◽  
Masakazu Yamazaki ◽  
Hideo Kikkawa

2015 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 050-054
Author(s):  
Tri Winarti

Newborns in hospitals often have a variety of invasive procedures, so that the baby is experiencingpain. Baby’s sense of discomfort and fear which will result from the pain can be observed throughthe tears. While wrapping the newborn to fit in a blanket (swaddling) can soothe a fussy baby or cry. Thepurpose of this study was to identify the effect of swaddling on pain response in neonates after venousblood sampling procedures in hospitals Ngudi Waluyo Wlingi. This study was descriptive. Samplestaken by accidental sampling technique with a sample of 35 neonates. The results showed that swaddledneonates after venous blood sampling procedure was 80% (28 respondents) pulse between 120–160times per minute, 100% (35 respondents) respiration between 30–60 times per minute and 51.4% (18respondents) SaO2 is greater than 92%. Behavioral responses such as shrill and loud cry was 8.4% (24respondents), stretching in some facial muscles and facial muscles stretching along each was 4.2% (12respondents), a strong move is 5.95% (17 respondents ), and increased muscle tone face with flexion ofthe fingers and toes was 7.7% (22 respondents).Use of swaddling post venous blood sampling proceduresin neonates can be used as a way of making neonates feel comfortable and calm.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 186
Author(s):  
Md. Sayed Uddin ◽  
Adam Andani Mohammed

Migrant workers are a different community as they have leave their origin country and entered to a new nation where the social life they had to dealt with differently. Because social life is very important as an individual has hold an ideology, special socio-cultural background and religious affiliation. It is, thus, an important phenomena to assess the perception of migrants about social life, the nature of their involvement in the social setting, the meaning they attach to it and their priorities and preferences in interacting with others. The study is based on the face-to-face interview of 100 Bangladeshis migrant workers who were selected according to two stage sampling procedure. On one stage, an area where Bangladeshi workers reside was selected through random sampling procedure. On the second stage, 100 respondents were selected from the area according to purposive and snowball sampling procedures. The study suggested that adequate measures should be taken to provide pre-departure training on job and Host County’s culture to the expected migrant workers.


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