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Dive into the research topics where M. Piñeiro-Iglesias is active.

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Featured researches published by M. Piñeiro-Iglesias.


Atmospheric Environment | 2003

A new method for the simultaneous determination of PAH and metals in samples of atmospheric particulate matter

M. Piñeiro-Iglesias; P. López-Mahía; S. Muniategui-Lorenzo; D. Prada-Rodríguez; Xavier Querol; Andrés Alastuey

A method for the analysis of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) and metals in the same filter portion employed for atmospheric particulate samples collection is proposed in this study. Two standard reference materials, SRM 1648 and SRM 1649a, were extracted by microwave-assisted extraction with hexane/acetone (1:1) and the solid residue was acid digested for the determination of levels of metals. It is demonstrated that there were no significant losses of the metal load during the PAH extraction process. Finally, the devised methodology was applied to actual atmospheric particulate samples.


Polycyclic Aromatic Compounds | 2002

Problems in the Extraction of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons from Diesel Particulate Matter

M. Piñeiro-Iglesias; P. López-Mahía; E. Vázquez-Blanco; S. Muniategui-Lorenzo; D. Prada-Rodríguez

In this work, a comparison between Soxhlet, ultrasonic, and microwave-assisted extraction (MAE) (using hexane:acetone 1:1) of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) from SRM 1650 diesel particulate matter was made. As good recoveries were not obtained for the higher molecular weight compounds, MAE with toluene and dichloromethane was also tested. Achieved recoveries were compared with the results obtained in the same assays made with SRM 1648 urban particulate matter and real atmospheric particulate samples. In order to explain the difficulty of the extraction of PAHs from SRM 1650 in comparison to SRM 1648 and real atmospheric particulate samples, elemental analysis, X-ray diffraction, and particle analysis using scanning electron microscopy coupled to an automatic computer imaging system were also made. It is important to notice that SRM 1650 shows a high percentage of carbon and differences in the morphology of the particles between SRM 1650 and SRM 1648 were observed.


Talanta | 2007

As, Bi, Sb and Sn determination in atmospheric particulate matter by direct solid sampling-hydride generation-electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry

Jorge Moreda-Piñeiro; Carmen Moscoso-Pérez; M. Piñeiro-Iglesias; P. López-Mahía; S. Muniategui-Lorenzo; Esther Fernández-Fernández; D. Prada-Rodríguez

A novel, rapid and simple method by hydride generation-electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry (HG-ETAAS) after direct As, Bi, Sb and Sn hydrides generation from untreated filters of atmospheric particulate matter (PM(10) and PM(2.5)) was optimised. PM(10) and PM(2.5) were not subjected to any pre-treatment: circular portions between 0.28 and 6.28cm(2) were directly placed into the reaction vessel of a batch mode generation system. A 2(8)x3/64 Plackett-Burman design was used as a multivariate strategy for the evaluation of the effects of several variables affecting the hydride generation, trapping and atomisation efficiencies. Trapping temperature was the most statistically significant variable for As, Bi and Sn. Atomisation temperature was also statistically significant for Sb determination. Optimum values of significant variables were selected by using univariate optimisation approaches. An aqueous calibration method was used throughout. The developed method has been found to be precise with relative standard deviations of 6.2, 5.3, 9.1 and 7.5% for 11 determinations in a filter sample containing 0.7, 1.0, 1.4 and 1.7microg l(-1) for As, Bi, Sb and Sn, respectively. Results obtained by direct solid sampling-HG-ETAAS have been found statistically comparable with those obtained after conventional method based on an acid digestion followed to ICP-MS. Absolute detection limits were 37, 15, 30, and 41ng l(-1) for As, Bi, Sb and Sn, respectively. Detection limits referred to the air volume sampled (in the range of 0.020-0.050ng m(-3)) were low enough for the determination of several hydride-forming elements from PM(10) and PM(2.5) samples collected in a non-polluted suburban area of A Coruña (NW Spain).


Science of The Total Environment | 2015

Impact of medium-distance pollution sources in a Galician suburban site (NW Iberian peninsula).

M.P. Gómez-Carracedo; J.M. Andrade; D. Ballabio; D. Prada-Rodríguez; S. Muniategui-Lorenzo; V. Consonni; M. Piñeiro-Iglesias; P. López-Mahía

This work studies airborne quality in a geographical area that has not been investigated broadly: a suburban site nearby A Coruña (Galicia, NW Iberian Peninsula). In contrast to major Spanish cities, the site has Atlantic characteristics: rainy, scarce calm weather and infrequent prolonged sunny periods. The relationships between several gaseous pollutants (NO, NO2, NOx, CO, O3, PM10, PM2.5 and PM1) and their temporal trends (daily, monthly and seasonal) were evaluated. The aim was to unravel whether medium- and long-distance sources were impacting upon the site. Univariate studies focused on factorizing the pollutants according to a codifying factor (wind direction, hour of the day, season and month). Multivariate studies (Varimax-rotated factorial analysis) were done separately on both weekdays and weekends. The intensity of the daily maxima for NO, NO2, NOx and CO was lower during the weekends, with O3 behaving opposite. PM average values agreed with previous historical reports for a rural background station relatively close to the site and they decreased daily between 11:00 and 19:00 h, likely because of the marine breeze. With moderate wind speeds the pollutants were associated to medium-distance pollution sources, mainly the city of A Coruña and a combination of industrial pollution sources (a power plant, a solid waste incinerator and a regional airport).


Talanta | 2015

Proposal of a procedure for the analysis of atmospheric polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in mosses

E. Concha-Graña; M. Piñeiro-Iglesias; S. Muniategui-Lorenzo; P. López-Mahía; D. Prada-Rodríguez

A useful analytical procedure for the analysis of 19 polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in moss samples using microwave assisted extraction and programmed temperature vaporization-gas chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (PTV-GC-MS/MS) determination is proposed. The state of art in PAHs analysis in mosses was reviewed. All the steps of the analysis were optimized regarding not only to the analytical parameters, but also the cost, the total time of analysis and the labour. The method was validated for one moss species used as moss monitor in ambient air, obtaining high recoveries (between 83-108%), low quantitation limits (lower than 2 ng g(-1)), good intermediate precision (relative standard deviation lower than 10%), uncertainties lower than 20%. Finally, the method was checked for other species, demonstrating its suitability for the analysis of different moss species. For this reason the proposed method can be helpful in air biomonitoring studies.


Chromatographia | 2002

Concentration and Clean-Up of Trace Hydrocarbons from Atmospheric Particulate Matter

M. Piñeiro-Iglesias; M. Miñones-Vázquez; E. Vázquez-Blanco; S. Muniategui-Lorenzo; P. López-Mahía; D. Prada-Rodríguez

SummaryThe aim of this work is to establish the best conditions for concentration and purification steps in the trace analysis of aliphatic and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) from atmospheric particulate matter by gas chromatography-flame ionisation detection (GC-FID) and high performance liquid chromatography with ultraviolet and fluorescence detection (HPLC-UV-FL). The best results for the more volatile compound were obtained with a combination of rotary evaporation and a stream of nitrogen (near to 100% for aliphatic hydrocarbons and from 70 to 105% for PAH). Two types of solid phase extraction (SPE)cartridges (Supelcleantm LC-Silica SPE tubes and Sep-Pak® Plus silica cartridges) and glass column were examined for the purification and fractionation step. Blank chromatograms of both types of cartridges analysed by GC-FID made this study difficult, because a PSS (programmed split-splitless) injector was employed thereby increasing the sensitivity. This problem was not observed in the HPLC-UV-FL blank chromatograms of these cartridges. Glass columns filled with silica and alumina were chosen because no interference was found in the GC-FID blank chromatograms and the best recoveries in the fractionation of both aliphatic hydrocarbons and PAH were achieved. This is especially important when aliphatic hydrocarbons concentrations are lower than 1 μg mL−1. Finally, the selected conditions were applied to the analysis of hydrocarbons in real atmospheric particulate samples.


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2017

Integrative health risk assessment of air pollution in the northwest of Spain

Xela García-Santiago; Nuria Gallego-Fernández; S. Muniategui-Lorenzo; M. Piñeiro-Iglesias; P. López-Mahía; Amaya Franco-Uría

Levels, origins and potential risks due to different air pollutants (ozone, SO2 and particle-borne metals) in NW Spain were investigated in eight locations affected by different emission sources. All monitored locations suffered the influence of traffic and industrial emissions, being this influence more important in urban locations. Although average values of the estimated hazard index (HI) due to particle-borne metals showed values lower than one, maximum values of this parameter exceeded this safety limit in urban locations. In general, Ni and As were identified as those metals most contributing to the HI. Furthermore, the presence of industrial emission episodes produced a significant increase in the magnitude of the HI in two of the seven urban areas. Therefore, the frequency and intensity of these episodes should be further investigated. Finally, levels of airborne and particle-borne pollutants were integrated with the aim of providing a comprehensive assessment of health risk. According to an established indexing system, air quality can be classified from good to moderate, being the southern urban locations (the most densely populated and industrialised ones) presenting the worst values. However, either the high or the low influence of acute and chronic-effect pollutants on air quality depends on the location.


Science of The Total Environment | 2019

Comparative study of atmospheric water-soluble organic aerosols composition in contrasting suburban environments in the Iberian Peninsula Coast

Regina M.B.O. Duarte; M. Piñeiro-Iglesias; P. López-Mahía; S. Muniategui-Lorenzo; Jorge Moreda-Piñeiro; Artur M. S. Silva; Armando C. Duarte

This study investigates the structural composition and major sources of water-soluble organic matter (WSOM) from PM2.5 collected, in parallel, during summer and winter, in two contrasting suburban sites at Iberian Peninsula Coast: Aveiro (Portugal) and Coruña (Spain). PM10 samples were also collected at Coruña for comparison. Ambient concentrations of PM2.5, total nitrogen (TN), and WSOM were higher in Aveiro than in Coruña, with the highest levels found in winter at both locations. In Coruña, concentrations of PM10, TN, and WSOM were higher than those from PM2.5. Regardless of the season, stable isotopic δ13C and δ15N in PM2.5 suggested important contributions of anthropogenic fresh organic aerosols (OAs) at Aveiro. In Coruña, δ13C and δ15N of PM2.5 and PM10 suggests decreased anthropogenic input during summer. Although excitation-emission fluorescence profiles were similar for all WSOM samples, multi-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy confirmed differences in their structural composition, reflecting differences in aging processes and/or local sources between the two locations. In PM2.5 WSOM in Aveiro, the relative distribution of non-exchangeable proton functional groups was in the order: HC (40-43%) > HCC (31-39%) > HCO (12-15%) > Ar-H (5.0-13%). However, in PM2.5 and PM10 WSOM in Coruña, the relative contribution of HCO groups (24-30% and 23-29%, respectively) equals and/or surpasses that of HCC (25-26% and 25-29%, respectively), being also higher than those of Aveiro. In both locations, the highest aromatic contents were observed during winter due to biomass burning emissions. The structural composition of PM2.5 and PM10 WSOM in Coruña is dominated by oxygenated aliphatic compounds, reflecting the contribution of secondary OAs from biogenic, soil dust, and minor influence of anthropogenic emissions. In contrast, the composition of PM2.5 WSOM in Aveiro appears to be significantly impacted by fresh and secondary anthropogenic OAs. Marine and biomass burning OAs are important contributors, common to both sites.


Atmospheric Environment | 2008

Tracers and impact of open burning of rice straw residues on PM in Eastern Spain

Mar Viana; Jm Lopez; X Querol; Andrés Alastuey; D. García-Gacio; Gustavo Blanco-Heras; P. López-Mahía; M. Piñeiro-Iglesias; M. J. Sanz; F. Sanz; Xuguang Chi; Willy Maenhaut


Fresenius Journal of Analytical Chemistry | 2000

Microwave assisted extraction of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons from atmospheric particulate samples.

M. Piñeiro-Iglesias; P. López-Mahía; E. Vázquez-Blanco; S. Muniategui-Lorenzo; D. Prada-Rodríguez; Esther Fernández-Fernández

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Andrés Alastuey

Spanish National Research Council

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Amaya Franco-Uría

University of Santiago de Compostela

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B. Artíñano

Complutense University of Madrid

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