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Dive into the research topics where Benjamin Cancès is active.

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Featured researches published by Benjamin Cancès.


Environmental Pollution | 2008

Factors affecting distribution and mobility of trace elements (Cu, Pb, Zn) in a perennial grapevine (Vitis vinifera L.) in the Champagne region of France.

E.I.B. Chopin; Béatrice Marin; R. Mkoungafoko; A. Rigaux; M Hopgood; E. Delannoy; Benjamin Cancès; M. Laurain

Soil and Vitis vinifera L. (coarse and fine roots, leaves, berries) concentration and geochemical partitioning of Cu, Pb and Zn were determined in a contaminated calcareous Champagne plot to assess their mobility and transfer. Accumulation ratios in roots remained low (0.1-0.4 for Cu and Zn, <0.05 for Pb). Differences between elements resulted from vegetation uptake strategy and soil partitioning. Copper, significantly associated with the oxidisable fraction (27.8%), and Zn with the acid soluble fraction (33.3%), could be mobilised by rhizosphere acidification and oxidisation, unlike Pb, essentially contained in the reducible fraction (72.4%). Roots should not be considered as a whole since the more reactive fine roots showed higher accumulation ratios than coarse ones. More sensitive response of fine roots, lack of correlation between chemical extraction results and vegetation concentrations, and very limited translocation to aerial parts showed that fine root concentrations should be used when assessing bioavailability.


Chemosphere | 2016

Copper and cobalt mobility in soil and accumulation in a metallophyte as influenced by experimental manipulation of soil chemical factors

Bastien Lange; Olivier Pourret; Pierre Jacques Meerts; Petru P. Jitaru; Benjamin Cancès; Claude Grison; Michel-Pierre Faucon

The influence of Fe oxides, Mn oxides and organic matter (OM) on the Cu and Co mobility in soil and accumulation in the metallophyte Anisopappus chinensis (Ac), as compared with Helianthus annuus (Ha), was experimentally investigated. Growth and accumulation response when increasing the exchangeable Cu and Co concentrations in soil were also investigated. Plants were cultivated on soil where concentrations of Cu, Co, Fe oxides, Mn oxides and OM content were varied according to 36 treatments. The OM supply decreased the Cu mobility and increased the Co mobility, resulting in decreasing the foliar Cu of Ac and increasing the foliar Co of Ha. The Fe oxides supply could increase the Cu accumulation for Ac, but was not verified for Ha. Compared with Ha, Ac increasingly accumulated Cu and Co without negative effect on plant growth while increasing Cu and Co mobility to phytotoxic concentrations. The results revealed promising perspectives for the use of Ac in Cu-contaminated environment phytoremediation applications.


Science of The Total Environment | 2016

Lead distribution in soils impacted by a secondary lead smelter: Experimental and modelling approaches

Arnaud R. Schneider; Benjamin Cancès; Marie Ponthieu; Sophie Sobanska; Marc F. Benedetti; Olivier Pourret; Alexandra Conreux; Ivan Calandra; Blandine Martinet; Xavier Morvan; Maxime Gommeaux; Béatrice Marin

Smelting activities are one of the most common sources of trace elements in the environment. The aim of this study was to determine the lead distribution in upper horizons (0-5 and 5-10cm) of acidic soils in the vicinity of a lead-acid battery recycling plant in northern France. The combination of chemical methods (sequential extractions), physical methods (Raman microspectroscopy and scanning electron microscopy with an energy dispersive spectrometer) and multi-surface complexation modelling enabled an assessment of the behaviour of Pb. Regardless of the studied soil, none of the Pb-bearing phases commonly identified in similarly polluted environments (e.g., anglesite) were observed. Lead was mainly associated with organic matter and manganese oxides. The association of Pb with these soil constituents can be interpreted as evidence of Pb redistribution in the studied soils following smelter particle deposition.


Environmental Pollution | 2016

Influence of dissolved organic matter and manganese oxides on metal speciation in soil solution: A modelling approach.

Arnaud R. Schneider; Marie Ponthieu; Benjamin Cancès; Alexandra Conreux; Xavier Morvan; Maxime Gommeaux; Béatrice Marin; Marc F. Benedetti

Trace element (TE) speciation modelling in soil solution is controlled by the assumptions made about the soil solution composition. To evaluate this influence, different assumptions using Visual MINTEQ were tested and compared to measurements of free TE concentrations. The soil column Donnan membrane technique (SC-DMT) was used to estimate the free TE (Cd, Cu, Ni, Pb and Zn) concentrations in six acidic soil solutions. A batch technique using DAX-8 resin was used to fractionate the dissolved organic matter (DOM) into four fractions: humic acids (HA), fulvic acids (FA), hydrophilic acids (Hy) and hydrophobic neutral organic matter (HON). To model TE speciation, particular attention was focused on the hydrous manganese oxides (HMO) and the Hy fraction, ligands not considered in most of the TE speciation modelling studies in soil solution. In this work, the model predictions of free ion activities agree with the experimental results. The knowledge of the FA fraction seems to be very useful, especially in the case of high DOM content, for more accurately representing experimental data. Finally, the role of the manganese oxides and of the Hy fraction on TE speciation was identified and, depending on the physicochemical conditions of the soil solution, should be considered in future studies.


Science of The Total Environment | 2017

Response of bacterial communities to Pb smelter pollution in contrasting soils

Arnaud R. Schneider; Maxime Gommeaux; Jérôme Duclercq; Nicolas Fanin; Alexandra Conreux; Abdelrahman Alahmad; Jérôme Lacoux; David Roger; Fabien Spicher; Marie Ponthieu; Benjamin Cancès; Xavier Morvan; Béatrice Marin

Anthropogenic inputs of trace elements (TE) into soils constitute a major public and environmental health problem. Bioavailability of TE is strongly related to the soil physicochemical parameters and thus to the ecosystem type. In order to test whether soil parameters influence the response of the bacterial community to TE pollution, we collected soil samples across contrasting ecosystems (hardwood, coniferous and hydromorphic soils), which have been contaminated in TE and especially lead (Pb) over several decades due to nearby industrial smelting activities. Bacterial community composition was analysed using high throughput amplicon sequencing and compared to the soil physicochemical parameters. Multivariate analyses of the pedological and biological data revealed that the bacterial community composition was affected by ecosystem type in the first place. An influence of the contamination level was also evidenced within each ecosystem. Despite the important variability in bacterial community structure, we found that specific bacterial groups such as γ-Proteobacteria, Verrucomicrobia and Chlamydiae showed a consistent response to Pb content across contrasting ecosystems. Verrucomicrobia were less abundant at high contamination level whereas Chlamydiae and γ-Proteobacteria were more abundant. We conclude that such groups and ratios thereof can be considered as relevant bioindicators of Pb contamination.


Journal Name: AIP Conf.Proc.882:217-219,2007; Conference: Prepared for 13th International Conference on X-ray Absorption Fine Structure (XAFS13), Stanford, California, 9-14 Jul 2006 | 2007

Adsorption Mechanisms of Trivalent Gold onto Iron Oxy-Hydroxides: From the Molecular Scale to the Model

Benjamin Cancès; Marc F. Benedetti; François Farges; Gordon E. Brown

Gold is a highly valuable metal that can concentrate in iron‐rich exogenetic horizons such as laterites. An improved knowledge of the retention mechanisms of gold onto highly reactive soil components such as iron oxy‐hydroxides is therefore needed to better understand and predict the geochemical behavior of this element. In this study, we use EXAFS information and titration experiments to provide a realistic thermochemical description of the sorption of trivalent gold onto iron oxy‐hydroxides. Analysis of Au LIII‐edge XAFS spectra shows that aqueous Au(III) adsorbs from chloride solutions onto goethite surfaces as inner‐sphere square‐planar complexes (Au(III)(OH,Cl)4), with dominantly OH ligands at pH > 6 and mixed OH/Cl ligands at lower pH values. In combination with these spectroscopic results, Reverse Monte Carlo simulations were used to constraint the possible sorption sites on the surface of goethite. Based on this structural information, we calculated sorption isotherms of Au(III) on Fe oxy‐hydroxid...


Journal of Soils and Sediments | 2016

Comparison of field portable XRF and aqua regia/ICPAES soil analysis and evaluation of soil moisture influence on FPXRF results

Arnaud R. Schneider; Benjamin Cancès; Clément Breton; Marie Ponthieu; Xavier Morvan; Alexandra Conreux; Béatrice Marin


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2016

Multivariate spatial analyses of the distribution and origin of trace and major elements in soils surrounding a secondary lead smelter.

Arnaud R. Schneider; Xavier Morvan; Nicolas Saby; Benjamin Cancès; Marie Ponthieu; Maxime Gommeaux; Béatrice Marin


Journal of Geochemical Exploration | 2016

Evaluation of the impact of organic matter composition on metal speciation in calcareous soil solution: Comparison of Model VI and NICA-Donnan

Marie Ponthieu; Olivier Pourret; Béatrice Marin; Arnaud R. Schneider; Xavier Morvan; Alexandra Conreux; Benjamin Cancès


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2015

Using synthetic models to simulate aging of Cu contamination in soils.

S. Proffit; Béatrice Marin; Benjamin Cancès; Marie Ponthieu; Stéphanie Sayen; Emmanuel Guillon

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Béatrice Marin

University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne

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Marie Ponthieu

University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne

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Arnaud R. Schneider

University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne

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Xavier Morvan

University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne

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Alexandra Conreux

University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne

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Maxime Gommeaux

University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne

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Marc F. Benedetti

Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris

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Olivier Pourret

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Alain Devos

University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne

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A. Rigaux

University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne

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