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Catalytic Converters

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Category: Public Health News

Article 07 Dec 2005

 

A study scheduled for publication in the Dec. 15 issue of the

American Chemical Society's journal, Environmental Science and

Technology, shows that for the first time, toxic metals emitted from

automotive catalytic converters have been detected in urban air in

the United States.

 

The research was done by Swedish scientists working in collaboration

with researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and

the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.

 

The researchers found high concentrations of platinum, palladium,

rhodium and osmium in air over the Boston metropolitan area. Although

these particles - known as platinum group elements - are not yet

considered a serious health risk, evidence suggests they potentially

could pose a future danger as worldwide car sales increase from an

estimated 50 million in 2000 to more than 140 million in 2050.

 

Finding ways to " stabilize " these metal particles within the

converters " should be a priority to limit their potential impact, "

says lead researcher Sebastien Rauch, Ph.D., of Chalmers University

of Technology in Göteborg. In addition to the United States - where

catalytic converters were first introduced - scientists have also

detected elevated concentrations of these elements in Europe, Japan,

Australia, Ghana, China and Greenland. Catalytic converters reduce

emissions of carbon monoxide, hydrocarbons, nitrogen oxides and other

pollutants.

 

Michael Bernstein

m_bernstein

American Chemical Society

http://www.acs.org

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