Environmental Particles, Volume 2 presents a critical review of the sampling, characterization, and behavior of particles in air, surface and ground water, sediments, and solids. The book analyzes the formation, aggregation, transport, and conversion of particles, and it evaluates the capabilities of physical and chemical methods of analysis.
1. Surface Spectroscopy of Environmental Particles by Fourier-Transform Infrared and Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
C.T. Johnston, G. Sposito, and W.L. Earl
2. Characterization of Biological and Environmental Particles Using Static and Dynamic Light Scattering
P. Schurtenberger and M.E. Newman
3. Structure, Formation, and Reactivity of Hydrous Oxide Particles; Insights from X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy
L. Charlet and A. Manceau
4. Use of Field-Flow Fractionation Techniques to Characterize Aquatic Particles, Colloids, and Macromolecules
R. Beckett and B.T. Hart
5. Environmental Aerosol Characterization by Single Particle Analysis Techniques
C. Xhoffer and R. van Grieken
6. Sampling and Characterization of Colloids and Particles in Ground Water for Studying Their Role in Contaminant Transport
J.F. McCarthy and C. Degueldre
7 . Manganese Particles in Freshwater R.R. De Vitre and W. Davison
8. Physicochemical Aggregation and Deposition in Aquatic Environments
C.R. O'Melia and C.L. Tiller
9. Modeling Coagulation of Algae in Marine Ecosystems
G.A. Jackson and S. Lochmann