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Rapid detection of toxic metals in non-crushed oyster shells by portable X-ray fluorescence spectrometry
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Rapid detection of toxic metals in non-crushed oyster shells by portable X-ray fluorescence spectrometry

Ju Chou, Garret Clement, Bradley Bursavich, Don Elbers, Baobao Cao and Weilie Zhou
Environmental pollution (1987), Vol.158(6), pp.2230-2234
06-2010
PMID: 20227802

Abstract

Animals Environmental Monitoring - methods Lead - analysis Lead - pharmacokinetics Lead - toxicity Louisiana Ostreidae - chemistry Ostreidae - metabolism Shellfish - analysis Spectrometry, X-Ray Emission Time Factors Tissue Distribution
The aim of this study was the multi-elemental detection of toxic metals such as lead (Pb) in non-crushed oyster shells by using a portable X-ray fluorescence (XRF) spectrometer. A rapid, simultaneous multi-element analytical methodology for non-crushed oyster shells has been developed using a portable XRF which provides a quick, quantitative, non-destructive, and cost-effective mean for assessment of oyster shell contamination from Pb. Pb contamination in oyster shells was further confirmed by scanning electron microscopy with energy dispersive spectroscopy (SEM-EDS). The results indicated that Pb is distributed in-homogeneously in contaminated shells. Oyster shells have a lamellar structure that could contribute to the high accumulation of Pb on oyster shells.

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