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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://tainguyenso.vnu.edu.vn/jspui/handle/123456789/7194

Title: Arsenic contamination of groundwater and drinking water in Vietnam: A human health threat
Authors: Berg, M.
Tran, H.C.
Nguyen, T.C.
Pham, H.V.
Schertenleib, R.
Giger, W.
Keywords: Arsenic
Contamination
Dissolution
Filtration
Oxidation
Rural areas
Issue Date: 2001
Publisher: Environmental Science and Technology
Citation: Volume 35, Issue 13, Page 2621-2626
Abstract: This is the first publication on arsenic contamination of the Red River alluvial tract in the city of Hanoi and in the surrounding rural districts. Due to naturally occurring organic matter in the sediments, the groundwaters are anoxic and rich in iron. With an average arsenic concentration of 159 ?g/L, the contamination levels varied from 1 to 3050 ?g/L in rural groundwater samples from private smallscale tubewells. In a highly affected rural area, the groundwater used directly as drinking water had an average concentration of 430 ?g/L. Analysis of raw groundwater pumped from the lower aquifer for the Hanoi water supply yielded arsenic levels of 240-320 ?g/L in three of eight treatment plants and 37-82 ?g/L in another five plants. Aeration and sand filtration that are applied in the treatment plants for iron removal lowered the arsenic concentrations to levels of 25-91 ?g/L, but 50% remained above the Vietnamese Standard of 50 ?g/L. Extracts of sediment samples from five bore cores showed a correlation of arsenic and iron contents (r 2 = 0.700, n = 64). The arsenic in the sediments may be associated with iron oxyhydroxides and released to the groundwater by reductive dissolution of iron. Oxidation of sulfide phases could also release arsenic to the groundwater, but sulfur concentrations in sediments were below 1 mg/g. The high arsenic concentrations found in the tubewells (48% above 50 ?g/L and 20% above 150 ?g/L) indicate that several million people consuming untreated groundwater might be at a considerable risk of chronic arsenic poisoning.
URI: http://tainguyenso.vnu.edu.vn/jspui/handle/123456789/7194
ISSN: 0013936X
Appears in Collections:2001-2005 VNU-DOI-Publications

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