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Featured researches published by Gorka Arana.


Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2010

Risk assessment of trace elements in sediments: The case of the estuary of the Nerbioi–Ibaizabal River (Basque Country)

Silvia Fdez-Ortiz de Vallejuelo; Gorka Arana; Alberto de Diego; Juan Manuel Madariaga

Long term (January 2005-January 2008) monitoring of sediments was used to investigate metal pollution in the estuary of the Nerbioi-Ibaizabal River (Bilbao, Basque Country). Sediments were collected from eight representative locations of the estuary approximately every three months. The concentration of fourteen elements was measured in sediment extracts. Different graphical representations of the data set, simple statistical methods and sediment quality guidelines were combined to investigate trends in space and time, identify pollution sources, and assess sediment quality from a toxicological point of view. In general terms, the main trend reveals a significant fall in metal concentration over the period investigated. There are still certain points of the estuary with relatively high concentration of toxic metals, but the toxicological approach suggests that the risk for living organisms is not important.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2008

Analytical diagnosis methodology to evaluate nitrate impact on historical building materials.

Maite Maguregui; A. Sarmiento; I. Martinez-Arkarazo; M. Angulo; Kepa Castro; Gorka Arana; Nestor Etxebarria; Juan Manuel Madariaga

Nitrate salts have become of greater importance in the decay of materials from historical buildings due to changes in the environment. This work presents an analytical diagnosis methodology to evaluate the impact of nitrate salts in mortars and bricks, combining noninvasive and microdestructive analytical techniques together with chemometric and thermodynamic data analyses. The impact of nitrate salts cannot be well ascertained if other soluble salts are not taken into account. Therefore, the principal results from this work relate to nitrate salts but some results for other kinds of salts are included. Data from Raman microprobe spectroscopy and micro X-ray fluorescence (μ-XRF) are used to characterise the original composition and a first approximation of the nature of the decay compounds, mainly nitrates. The soluble salts are extracted and the anions and cations are quantified by means of ion chromatography with conductimetric detection for anions/cations and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP/MS) for cations. The values obtained allow two different data treatments to be applied. First, chemometric analysis is carried out to search for correlations among anions and cations. Second, thermodynamic modelling with the RUNSALT program is performed to search for environmental conditions of soluble salt formation. All the results are finally used to diagnose the impact of nitrates.


Analytica Chimica Acta | 2009

Development of a focused ultrasonic-assisted extraction of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in marine sediment and mussel samples.

Patricia Navarro; Nestor Etxebarria; Gorka Arana

Focused ultrasonic-assisted extraction (FUSE) is a new and particular technique based on the cavitation effect. In this work, the focused ultrasound assisted extraction was studied and developed for the extraction of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons from marine sediments and mussel tissues. The variables influencing the extraction (amplitude of the ultrasound pulse, the extraction time and the solvent) were studied by a full factorial design and a central composite design. As a result, flat response surfaces were obtained and the most convenient conditions were 45% of ultrasound amplitude, 120s of extraction time and 5 mL of acetone. Both accuracy and precision of the method were evaluated by means of two certified reference materials (marine sediment and mussel tissue) and the results were also compared to those obtained by microwave assisted extraction.


Science of The Total Environment | 2015

Fate of hazardous elements in agricultural soils surrounding a coal power plant complex from Santa Catarina (Brazil)

Azibar Rodriguez-Iruretagoiena; Silvia Fdez-Ortiz de Vallejuelo; Ainara Gredilla; Claudete G. Ramos; Marcos L.S. Oliveira; Gorka Arana; Alberto de Diego; Juan Manuel Madariaga; Luis F.O. Silva

Hazard element contamination coming from coal power plants is something obvious, but when this contamination is accompanied by other contamination sources, such as, urban, coal mining and farming activities the study gets complicated. This is the case of an area comprised in the southern part of Santa Catarina state (Brazil) with the largest private power plant generator. After the elemental analysis of 41 agricultural soils collected in an extensive area around the thermoelectric (from 0 to 47 km), the high presence of As, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, Mn, Mo, Pb, Sb, Sn, Tl, V and Zn was found in some specific areas around the power plant. Nevertheless, as the NWAC (Normalized-and-Weighted Average Concentration) confirmed, only soils from one site were classified as of very high concern due to the presence of potential toxic elements. This site was located within the sedimentation basin of the power plant. The spatial distribution obtained by kriging in combination with the analysis of the data by Principal Component Analysis (PCA) revealed three important hotspots in the area according to soil uses and geographic localization: the thermoelectric, its area of influence due to volatile compound deposition, and the area comprised between two urban areas. Farming practice turn out to be an important factor too for the quantity of hazard element stored in soils.


Science of The Total Environment | 2013

Diagnosing the traffic impact on roadside soils through a multianalytical data analysis of the concentration profiles of traffic-related elements

Jose Antonio Carrero; Iker Arrizabalaga; Julen Bustamante; Naiara Goienaga; Gorka Arana; Juan Manuel Madariaga

The road traffic has become one of the most serious environmental problems in many cities and the main source of pollution of urban soils. To diagnose properly the magnitude of such impacts on roadside soils, eight urban and metropolitan soils were selected as a function of traffic density, distance to the road and years of operation, for which the concentration of 60 elements (major, minor and trace elements) were measured by semi-quantitative ICP-MS after acid digestion, as a first step in assessing the traffic impact. With this information, a comprehensive study was carried out focusing on the quantitative analysis of the concentration of 46 elements from the 8 sampling areas, analyzing the vertical and horizontal distributions of the metals in the roadside soils. The chemometric analysis showed that only the traffic-related elements accumulate in topsoil and present a high decreasing profile with depth and the distance to the road; however, this clear behavior takes places only in old roads that have undergone the traffic impact for a long time, but not in new roads or roads with low traffic density. Finally, the geoaccumulation indexes are suggested to be used instead of the local guidelines to assess the pollution state of the roadside soils, especially for the emerging trace elements like Antimony.


Talanta | 2009

Ultrasound energy focused in a glass probe: an approach to the simultaneous and fast extraction of trace elements from sediments.

Silvia Fdez-Ortiz de Vallejuelo; Ana Barrena; Gorka Arana; Alberto de Diego; Juan Manuel Madariaga

The 3051 USEPA method (or alternatively, the 3051A) can be considered nowadays as a reference method to extract metals from sediments. However, after microwave heating, the sample must be allowed to cool down, which results in a considerable lengthening of the whole analytical process. Microwave ovens and their maintenance are, in addition, expensive, and its use is relatively dangerous. The use of ultrasound focused energy to assist the extraction of chemicals from solid samples is a safe and relatively cheap technique. In this work we propose a new method to extract simultaneously several elements from sediments using ultrasound energy focused in a glass probe to accelerate the process, and check its possibilities to become an alternative to the EPA3051(A) approach. The optimised procedure allows extracting 13 elements in only 6 min, with similar recoveries and, in general, better repetitivities than the EPA3051. In addition, the suspension is only slightly heated during the leaching process.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2011

Spectroscopic evaluation of the environmental impact on black crusted modern mortars in urban–industrial areas

Nagore Prieto-Taboada; Maite Maguregui; I. Martinez-Arkarazo; M. A. Olazabal; Gorka Arana; Juan Manuel Madariaga

AbstractA multianalytical characterisation of black crusted modern construction materials from buildings located in the Bilbao Metropolitan area (North Spain) was carried out. According to the mineral composition determined by Raman spectroscopy, calcite and hematite were the major compounds found while aragonite, limonite, rutile, quartz and some aluminosilicates such as obsidian or amazonite (KAlSi3O8) were also present in minor percentages. As deterioration products, gypsum and anhydrite were widely found not only in the surface but also in the inner part of strongly deteriorated samples. Coquimbite (Fe2(SO4)3·9H2O) was identified as well in the most protected facade where high amounts of Fe, having probably an anthropogenic origin, were measured by micro X-ray fluorescence (μ-XRF). Zn was found to be in high amounts while Cu, Pb, Ti, Mn, Sr and K were identified as minor elements. Considering the non-expected concentrations found for some anthropogenic elements, a sequential extraction was carried out in order to determine their chemical form by means of ion chromatography and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. The orientation of the facades, which had a different influence from rain washing and industrial and traffic impact, was shown to affect the accumulation of different compounds in the black crust. Finally, the MEDUSA software was used to simulate the reactions among the original compounds, deposited pollutants and the atmospheric acid gases in order to explain the presence of the decaying species found. FigureMultianalytical Speciation protocol applied on the analysis of modern mortars


Analytica Chimica Acta | 2008

Evaluation of the physiologically based extraction test as an indicator of metal toxicity in mussel tissue

Patricia Navarro; Gorka Arana; Nestor Etxebarria; John R. Dean

In order to estimate the bioaccessibility of metals from mussel tissues, an in vitro physiologically based extraction test was applied to simulate the human gastrointestinal conditions. The samples were subjected to human body temperature, and Ag, Co, Cr, Cu, Mn, Ni, Pb and Sn were sequentially extracted with simulated gastric solution, followed by extraction with a simulated intestinal solution. Both gastric and intestinal extracted solutions and microwave-digested residue were analysed by ICP-MS. The procedure was applied to a certified reference material NIST 2977 (mussel tissue) to prove the accuracy of the method. Some mussel tissue samples from Northern Spain were subjected to this procedure to determine their metal content and their metal oral bioaccessibility.


Trends in Analytical Chemistry | 2004

Emerging needs for sustained production of laboratory reference materials

José Manuel Amigo; Gorka Arana; Nestor Etxebarria; Luis Fernández

Many different analytes are determined on a daily basis in many different matrices and the quality control (QC) for these determinations requires the use of reference materials (RMs), not only certified RMs (CRMs) but also laboratory RMs (LRMs) for routine purposes (e.g. control charting). In some cases, such materials are not available and the possibility of producing them in-house has to be considered. This article provides two examples showing that LRMs can be prepared by following a systematic approach without a very complex infrastructure: fly ash from cement manufacture; and, contaminated estuarine sediment.


Spectrochimica Acta Part A: Molecular and Biomolecular Spectroscopy | 2014

Applicability of a Diffuse Reflectance Infrared Fourier Transform handheld spectrometer to perform in situ analyses on Cultural Heritage materials

Iker Arrizabalaga; Olivia Gómez-Laserna; Julene Aramendia; Gorka Arana; Juan Manuel Madariaga

This work studies the applicability of a Diffuse Reflectance Infrared Fourier Transform handheld device to perform in situ analyses on Cultural Heritage assets. This portable diffuse reflectance spectrometer has been used to characterise and diagnose the conservation state of (a) building materials of the Guevara Palace (15th century, Segura, Basque Country, Spain) and (b) different 19th century wallpapers manufactured by the Santa Isabel factory (Vitoria-Gasteiz, Basque Country, Spain) and by the well known Dufour and Leroy manufacturers (Paris, France), all of them belonging to the Torre de los Varona Castle (Villanañe, Basque Country, Spain). In all cases, in situ measurements were carried out and also a few samples were collected and measured in the laboratory by diffuse reflectance spectroscopy (DRIFT) in order to validate the information obtained by the handheld instrument. In the analyses performed in situ, distortions in the diffuse reflectance spectra can be observed due to the presence of specular reflection, showing the inverted bands caused by the Reststrahlen effect, in particular on those IR bands with the highest absorption coefficients. This paper concludes that the results obtained in situ by a diffuse reflectance handheld device are comparable to those obtained with laboratory diffuse reflectance spectroscopy equipment and proposes a few guidelines to acquire good spectra in the field, minimising the influence caused by the specular reflection.

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Juan Manuel Madariaga

University of the Basque Country

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Nestor Etxebarria

University of the Basque Country

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Alberto de Diego

University of the Basque Country

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Ainara Gredilla

University of the Basque Country

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Olatz Zuloaga

University of the Basque Country

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Iker Arrizabalaga

University of the Basque Country

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Jose Antonio Carrero

University of the Basque Country

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I. Martinez-Arkarazo

University of the Basque Country

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