Author Archives: David Bradley

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Alchemist chemical selection for the Ides of March

This week, The Alchemist learns how bionic implants might be powered up by a breath of fresh air while the elusive water dimer is spotted using rotational spectroscopy. In environmental research, a carbon capture material acts like an organometallic sponge and the whole of human metabolism has been mapped. New materials could put an end to fogged windshields and bathroom mirrors. Finally, this week's award goes to lipid science.

via The Alchemist Newsletter: March 15, 2013 — Welcome to ChemWeb.

Heavy metal veggies

The presence of heavy metal ions of nickel and chromium in vegetables, including potatoes, carrots and onions, irrigated with polluted water is revealed using X-series inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry.Sotiris Stasinos and Ioannis Zabetakis of the Food Chemistry Laboratory, at the University of Athens, Greece, explain how heavy metals ions, in general, can migrate from polluted soil and/or irrigation water to tuberous plants and root vegetables. The implications of such migration being that these toxic agents can enter the food chain leading to long-term, chronic consumption and the many putative health problems such exposure can cause. This not only includes the direct toxic effects of such metals but the depletion of essential trace elements in the body. Part of the issue is that unlike certain organic residues metal ions persist, they cannot be degraded or otherwise broken down into less harmful constituents by virtue of being elements rather than compounds. They point out that other researchers have highlighted various sources of contamination by human sources including: mining, industrial and domestic wastewater and sewage sludge, as well as atmospheric deposition.

via Heavy metal veggies: ICP-MS worth a nickel - Ezine - spectroscopyNOW.com.