Sequential extraction and risk assessment of pollutants from one major tributary of the Ganga
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IWA Publishing
Abstract
The geochemical fractionation of toxic heavy metals Cd, Pb, Cr, Co, Mn, Ni, Cu, Fe and Zn was investigated in 10 different sites of river bed sediments (up, mid and downstream) of Gomti River at Lucknow city. Sequential extraction technique was used to identify the distribution of trace elements binding in different fractions; i.e., exchangeable, carbonate, Fe and Mn oxide, organic matter and residual. Heavy metal concentrations were least at upstream and significantly higher in mid and downstream. Fractionation indicated that dominant metals were bound in residual fraction to the bed sediments except for Cd and Pb, which were bound in an equivalent fraction. Geo-accumulation index factor reveals that the enrichment of heavy metals in the bio-available fraction is contributed anthropogenically. Hierarchical cluster analysis also shows the metal pollution load in the river. Risk assessment code of Cd and Ni showed very high risk (ranged from 54.41 to 85.56 and 20.57 to 44.92 respectively) followed by Pb (high risk), Zn, Co (medium risk), Cr, Mn, Cu, Fe (low risk) in Gomti River water. Further, concentrations of Cd and Pb at mid Lucknow were 31 and 75%, high enough to pose a substantial risk to the environment.
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This paper is submitted by the author of IIT (BHU), Varanasi, India
Keywords
Gomti River India; Lucknow Uttar Pradesh, Cadmium; Cluster analysis; Extraction; Hierarchical systems; Iron oxides; Manganese; Manganese removal (water treatment); Quality control; Risk assessment; River pollution; Rivers; Trace elements; Water quality, cadmium; carbonic acid; chromium; copper; heavy metal; iron; lead; manganese; nickel; organic matter; river water; zinc, Bed sediments; Down-stream; Geochemical fractionations; Gomti river; Heavy metals (Cd); Risks assessments; River bed; River water quality; Sequential extraction; Toxic heavy metals, cluster analysis; enrichment; fractionation; heavy metal; organic matter; risk assessment; sequential extraction; tributary; water quality, Article; atomic absorption spectrometry; extraction; fractionation; geoaccumulation index; hierarchical clustering; India; limit of detection; microbial degradation; pH; quality control; risk assessment; sediment; sequential extraction; titrimetry; water contamination; water quality, Positive ions