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Dive into the research topics where Blanca Jiménez Cisneros is active.

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Featured researches published by Blanca Jiménez Cisneros.


Water Research | 2001

HEAVY METAL REMOVAL WITH MEXICAN CLINOPTILOLITE: MULTI-COMPONENT IONIC EXCHANGE

Mabel Vaca Mier; Raymundo López Callejas; Ronald Gehr; Blanca Jiménez Cisneros; Pedro J. J. Alvarez

This paper describes the interactions of Pb(II), Cd(II), and Cr(VI) competing for ion-exchange sites in naturally occurring clinoptilolite. Dissolved Pb and Cd were effectively removed within 18 h in batch reactors, with higher removal efficiencies (> 95%) in the acidic pH range. The presence of Cr(VI), which can interact with these metals to form anionic complexes, significantly diminished the Pb and Cd removal efficiencies. A decrease in the efficiency of clinoptilolite to remove Pb was also observed in the high (> or = 10) pH range. This was attributed to the formation of anionic hydroxo-complexes with little affinity for cationic ion exchange sites. Pb outcompeted Cd for ion exchange sites in a flow-through column packed with clinoptilolite (contact time = 10 s). The preferential removal of Pb in column, but not in batch reactors, reflects that competitive retention can be affected by contact time because diffusion kinetics may influence the removal efficiency to a greater extent than equilibrium partitioning. Phenol, which was tested as a representative organic co-contaminant, slightly hindered heavy metal removal in batch reactors. This was attributed to the formation of organometallic complexes that cannot penetrate the zeolite exchange channels. Altogether, these results show that natural zeolites hold great potential to remove cationic heavy metal species from industrial wastewater. Nevertheless, process efficiency can be hindered by the presence of ligands that form complexes with reduced accessibility and/or affinity for ion exchange.


Chemosphere | 2010

Accumulation and leaching potential of some pharmaceuticals and potential endocrine disruptors in soils irrigated with wastewater in the Tula Valley, Mexico.

Richard Gibson; Juan C. Durán-Álvarez; Karina León Estrada; Alma Chávez; Blanca Jiménez Cisneros

The reuse of wastewater for irrigation of agricultural land is a well established practice but introduces many contaminants into the terrestrial environment including pharmaceuticals and personal care products. This study reports the persistence and leaching potential of a group of acidic pharmaceuticals, carbamazepine, and three endocrine disruptors in soils from the Tula Valley in Mexico, one of the largest irrigation districts in the world that uses untreated wastewater. After irrigation of soil columns with fortified wastewater over the equivalent of one crop cycle, between 0% and 7% of the total added amounts of ibuprofen, naproxen, and diclofenac and between 0% and 25% of 4-nonylphenol, triclosan, and bisphenol-A were recovered from the soil profiles. Carbamazepine was more persistent, between 55% and 107% being recovered. Amounts in leachates suggested that movement through the soil was possible for all of the analytes, particularly in profiles of low organic matter and clay content. Analysis of soil samples from the Tula Valley confirmed the general lack of accumulation of the acidic pharmaceuticals (concentrations from below the limit of detection to 0.61 μgkg(-1)) and endocrine disruptors (concentrations from below the limit of detection to 109 μgkg(-1)) despite continual addition through regular irrigation with untreated wastewater; there was little evidence of movement through the soil profiles. In contrast, carbamazepine was present in horizon A of the soil at concentrations equivalent to several years of additions by irrigation (2.6-7.5 μgkg(-1)) and was also present in the deeper horizons. The persistence and mobility of carbamazepine suggested a potential to contaminate groundwater.


Science of The Total Environment | 2013

The occurrence and distribution of a group of organic micropollutants in Mexico City's water sources.

Thania E. Félix–Cañedo; Juan C. Durán–Álvarez; Blanca Jiménez Cisneros

The occurrence and distribution of a group of 17 organic micropollutants in surface and groundwater sources from Mexico City was determined. Water samples were taken from 7 wells, 4 dams and 15 tanks where surface and groundwater are mixed and stored before distribution. Results evidenced the occurrence of seven of the target compounds in groundwater: salicylic acid, diclofenac, di-2-ethylhexylphthalate (DEHP), butylbenzylphthalate (BBP), triclosan, bisphenol A (BPA) and 4-nonylphenol (4-NP). In surface water, 11 target pollutants were detected: same found in groundwater as well as naproxen, ibuprofen, ketoprofen and gemfibrozil. In groundwater, concentration ranges of salicylic acid, 4-NP and DEHP, the most frequently found compounds, were 1-464, 1-47 and 19-232 ng/L, respectively; while in surface water, these ranges were 29-309, 89-655 and 75-2,282 ng/L, respectively. Eleven target compounds were detected in mixed water. Concentrations in mixed water were higher than those determined in groundwater but lower than the detected in surface water. Different to that found in ground and surface water, the pesticide 2,4-D was found in mixed water, indicating that some pollutants can reach areas where they are not originally present in the local water sources. Concentration of the organic micropollutants found in this study showed similar to lower to those reported in water sources from developed countries. This study provides information that enriches the state of the art on the occurrence of organic micropollutants in water sources worldwide, notably in megacities of developing countries.


Water Research | 2010

Valuing the subsurface pathogen treatment barrier in water recycling via aquifers for drinking supplies

Declan Page; Peter Dillon; Simon Toze; Davide Bixio; Bettina Genthe; Blanca Jiménez Cisneros; Thomas Wintgens

A quantitative microbial risk assessment (QMRA) was performed at four managed aquifer recharge (MAR) sites (Australia, South Africa, Belgium, Mexico) where reclaimed wastewater and stormwater is recycled via aquifers for drinking water supplies, using the same risk-based approach that is used for public water supplies. For each of the sites, the aquifer treatment barrier was assessed for its log(10) removal capacity much like for other water treatment technologies. This information was then integrated into a broader risk assessment to determine the human health burden from the four MAR sites. For the Australian and South African cases, managing the aquifer treatment barrier was found to be critical for the schemes to have low risk. For the Belgian case study, the large treatment trains both in terms of pre- and post-aquifer recharge ensures that the risk is always low. In the Mexico case study, the risk was high due to the lack of pre-treatment and the low residence times of the recharge water in the aquifer. A further sensitivity analysis demonstrated that human health risk can be managed if aquifers are integrated into a treatment train to attenuate pathogens. However, reduction in human health disease burden (as measured in disability adjusted life years, DALYs) varied depending upon the number of pathogens in the recharge source water. The beta-Poisson dose response curve used for translating rotavirus and Cryptosporidium numbers into DALYs coupled with their slow environmental decay rates means poor quality injectant leads to aquifers having reduced value to reduce DALYs. For these systems, like the Mexican case study, longer residence times are required to meet their DALYs guideline for drinking water. Nevertheless the results showed that the risks from pathogens can still be reduced and recharging via an aquifer is safer than discharging directly into surface water bodies.


Desalination and Water Treatment | 2012

Operating conditions and membrane selection for the removal of conventional and emerging pollutants from spring water using nanofiltration technology: the Tula Valley case

Fabián Neira Ruíz; Arnold Arcos Arévalo; Juan C. Durán–Álvarez; Blanca Jiménez Cisneros

Abstract The aquifer of the Tula Valley in Mexico is recharged by the infiltration of wastewater used for agricultural irrigation. This aquifer is considered to be a possible source of water for Mexico City, and although, in general, the water is good quality it still contains hardness and specific emerging pollutants. This research aims to identify a suitable treatment process based on membrane nanofiltration as it is a proven technology. Four nanofiltration membranes were compared using the critical flux concept in order to select the two that produced the largest amount of permeate. Membrane fouling was assessed by investigating the deposition of calcium using SEM images. To control hardness scaling, pretreatment with 150% of lime was employed. Finally, one membrane was selected based on its capability to remove carbamazepine, bisphenol A, triclosan, butilbenzylphthalate, and 4-nonylphenol. The selected membrane was operated at 800 kPa, producing 87.30 l m−2 h−1.


Archive | 2017

Photo-Oxidation Treatment of the Reject Stream of a Nanofiltration Membrane System

Alma Chávez Mejía; Abraham Chávez Velasco; Paloma Zaragoza Sánchez; Blanca Jiménez Cisneros

The treatment of reject water from a nanofiltration system by photo-oxidation with ultraviolet light and titanium dioxide (TiO2) showed that degradation efficiency of the organic micropollutants (OMPs) varied depending on the reaction time analyzed. Thus, compounds such as diclofenac and ibuprofen exhibited greater than 95 % degradation within the first 15 min, while less than 65 % of naproxen and gemfibrozil was degraded after 15 min of reaction time. Salicylic acid had the lowest degradation efficiency in 15 min (<45 %) of all of the compounds studied. In addition to radical recombination, suspended particles limit potential homogeneous illumination in the reaction system while the presence of organic material causes parallel hydroxyl radical-consuming reactions, which may be responsible for low degradation efficiencies under these conditions.


Water Research | 2004

Sludge accumulation, characteristics, and pathogen inactivation in four primary waste stabilization ponds in central Mexico.

Kara L. Nelson; Blanca Jiménez Cisneros; George Tchobanoglous; Jeannie L. Darby


Revista Internacional De Contaminacion Ambiental | 2009

COMPARACIÓN DE CUATRO TRATAMIENTOS FISICOQUÍMICOS DE LIXIVIADOS

Roger Iván Méndez Novelo; Elba René Castillo Borges; María Rosa Sauri Riancho; Carlos Quintal Franco; Germán Giácoman Vallejos; Blanca Jiménez Cisneros


Revista Internacional De Contaminacion Ambiental | 2017

INSTRUMENTOS TECNOLÓGICOS PATENTADOS EN MÉXICO PARA TRATAR AGUAS RESIDUALES

Lilian E. Domínguez-Montero; Héctor M. Poggi-Varaldo; Miguel Ángel Pérez Angón; Blanca Jiménez Cisneros; Rosa Olivia Cañizares Villanueva; Sergio Caffarel Méndez; Eugenio Frixione Garduño


Archive | 2014

Beneficial and Negative Impacts on Soil by the Reuse of Treated/Untreated Municipal Wastewater for Agricultural Irrigation – A Review of the Current Knowledge and Future Perspectives

Juan C. Durán–Álvarez; Blanca Jiménez Cisneros

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Catalina Maya Rendón

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Alma Chávez Mejía

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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José Antonio Barrios Pérez

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Juan C. Durán–Álvarez

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Mabel Vaca Mier

Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana

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A. G. González

Mexican Social Security Institute

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Fernando Arámbula Cosío

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Juan C. Durán-Álvarez

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Miguel Angel Martínez Cordero

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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