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Featured researches published by Kamila Widziewicz.


Environmental Technology | 2016

Heavy metals and its chemical speciation in sewage sludge at different stages of processing

Malwina Tytła; Kamila Widziewicz; Ewa Zielewicz

ABSTRACT The analysis of heavy metal concentrations and forms in sewage sludge constitutes an important issue in terms of both health and environmental hazards the metals pose. The total heavy metals concentration enables only the assessment of its contamination. Hence the knowledge of chemical forms is required to determine their environmental mobility and sludge final disposal. Heavy metals speciation was studied by using four-stage sequential extraction BCR (Community Bureau of Reference). This study was aimed at determining the total concentration of selected heavy metals (Zn, Cu, Ni, Pb, Cd, Cr and Hg) and their chemical forms (except for Hg) in sludge collected at different stages of its processing at two municipal Wastewater Treatment Plants in southern Poland. Metals contents in sludge samples were determined by using flame atomic absorption spectrometry (FAAS) and electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry (ETAAS). This study shows that Zn and Cu appeared to be the most abundant in sludge, while Cd and Hg were in the lowest concentrations. The sewage sludge revealed the domination of immobile fractions over the mobile ones. The oxidizable and residual forms were dominant for all the heavy metals. There was also a significant difference in metals speciation between sludges of different origin which was probably due to differences in wastewater composition and processes occurring in biological stage of wastewater treatment. The results indicate a negligible capability of metals to migrate from sludge into the environment. Our research revealed a significant impact of thickening, stabilization and hygienization on the distribution of heavy metals in sludge and their mobility.


Archive | 2017

Inhalation Exposure to PM-Bound Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons Released from Barbecue Grills Powered by Gas, Lump Charcoal, and Charcoal Briquettes

Artur Badyda; Kamila Widziewicz; Wioletta Rogula-Kozłowska; Grzegorz Majewski; Izabela Jureczko

The present study seeks to define the possible cancer risk arising from the inhalation exposure to particle (PM)-bound polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) present in barbecue emission gases and to compare the risk depending on the type of fuel used for grill powering. Three types of fuel were compared: liquid propane gas, lump charcoal, and charcoal briquettes. PM2.5 and PM2.5-100 were collected during grilling. Subsequently, 16 PAHs congeners were extracted from the PM samples and measured quantitatively using gas chromatography. The content of PM-bound PAHs was used to calculate PAHs deposition in the respiratory tract using the multiple path particle dosimetry model. Finally, a probabilistic risk model was developed to assess the incremental lifetime cancer risk (ILCR) faced by people exposed to PAHs. We found a distinctly greater PAHs formation in case of grills powered by charcoal briquettes. The summary concentration of PAHs (Σ16PAH) ranged from <0.002 μg/m3 (gas grill) to 21.52 μg/m3 (grill powered by briquettes). Daily exposure of a grill operator, while grilling meat, to PM2.5-bound PAHs, adjusted to benzo[a]pyrene toxicity equivalent (BaPeq), was 326.9, 401.6, and 0.04 ng/d for lump charcoal, charcoal briquettes, and gas powered grill, respectively. Exposure to PAHs emitted from charcoal briquettes was four orders of magnitude greater than that for gas grill. The ILCR followed a log-normal distribution, with a geometric mean of 8.38 × 10-5 for exposure to PM2.5-bound PAHs emitted from gas grills unloaded with food and as high as 8.68 × 10-1 for the grills loaded with food over charcoal briquettes. The estimated cancer risk for people who would inhale barbecue particles for 5 h a day, 40 days a year exceeds the acceptable level set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. We conclude that the type of heat source used for grilling influences the PM-bound PAHs formation. The greatest concentration of PAHs is generated when grilling over charcoal briquettes. Loading grills with food generates conspicuously more PAHs emissions. Traditional grilling poses cancer risk much above the acceptable limit, as opposed to much less risk involving gas powered grills.


Atmospheric Environment | 2016

Metal induced inhalation exposure in urban population: A probabilistic approach

Kamila Widziewicz; Krzysztof Loska


Atmospheric Pollution Research | 2016

Cancer risk from arsenic and chromium species bound to PM2.5 and PM1 – Polish case study

Kamila Widziewicz; Wioletta Rogula-Kozłowska; Krzysztof Loska


Microchemical Journal | 2017

A simple method for determination of total water in PM1 on quartz fiber filters

Wioletta Rogula-Kozłowska; Kamila Widziewicz; Grzegorz Majewski


International Journal of Environmental Research | 2017

Lung Cancer Risk Associated with Exposure to Benzo(A)Pyrene in Polish Agglomerations, Cities, and Other Areas

Kamila Widziewicz; Wioletta Rogula-Kozłowska; Grzegorz Majewski


Atmospheric Pollution Research | 2017

Urban environment as a factor modulating metals deposition in the respiratory track and associated cancer risk

Kamila Widziewicz; Wioletta Rogula-Kozłowska


E3S Web of Conferences | 2018

Short review on PM-bound water. Its presence in the atmosphere, forms of occurrence and determination by Karl Fischer coulometric titration

Kamila Widziewicz; Malwina Tytła; Patrycja Rogula-Kopiec; Wioletta Rogula-Kozłowska


E3S Web of Conferences | 2018

Factors determining the concentration and chemical composition of particulate matter in the air of selected service facilities

Patrycja Rogula-Kopiec; Józef S. Pastuszka; Barbara Mathews; Kamila Widziewicz


E3S Web of Conferences | 2018

Research on chromium and arsenic speciation in atmospheric particulate matter: short review

Katarzyna Nocoń; Wioletta Rogula-Kozłowska; Kamila Widziewicz

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Grzegorz Majewski

Warsaw University of Life Sciences

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Malwina Tytła

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Artur Badyda

Warsaw University of Technology

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Barbara Mathews

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Izabela Jureczko

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Krzysztof Loska

Silesian University of Technology

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Anna Gayer

Warsaw University of Technology

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Dominika Mucha

Warsaw University of Technology

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