Chemical Controls On The Bioavailability Of Cyanide - Introduction

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
A. Redman
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
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2
File Size:
102 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2011

Abstract

Aquatic organisms are sensitive to free cyanide (HCN) though the presence of certain metals that can form stable complexes and thereby reducing both the amount of bioavailable cyanide. Recent work has suggested that consideration of HCN rather than total cyanide can provide the basis for water quality criteria. Cyanide is often present in complex effluents that affect speciation and bioavailability. We have developed a model to predict the speciation of cyanide in complex effluents and have shown that this model can predict the toxicity of metal-cyanide complexes in terms of HCN. This study evaluated available cyanide toxicity exposures with this model to assess the role of water chemistry (e.g., metal-cyanide interactions) on the observed. Toxicity endpoints based on total cyanide ranged over several orders of magnitude for a variety of metal-cyanide mixtures. However, predicted HCN concentrations among these same tests described the observed toxicity data to within a factor of 2. Aquatic toxicity can be well described using HCN though in certain metal-cyanide mixtures toxicity was jointly described by HCN and elevated levels of bioavailable metals. This work was performed in support of an industry-sponsored reassessment (Gensemer et al 2006) of the U.S. EPA water quality criteria for cyanide (EPA 1985) using free cyanide as the basis for the re-calculation. The work presented in this manuscript presents technical support for using free cyanide as the preferred basis for this recalculation.
Citation

APA: A. Redman  (2011)  Chemical Controls On The Bioavailability Of Cyanide - Introduction

MLA: A. Redman Chemical Controls On The Bioavailability Of Cyanide - Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2011.

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