Chemosphere
Basic Information
Chemosphere is an international journal designed for the publication of original communications as well as review articles on chemicals in the environment. Chemosphere, as a multidisciplinary journal, offers maximum dissemination of investigations related to all aspects of the identification, quantification, behavior, fate, toxicology, treatment, and remediation of chemicals in the bio-, hydro-, litho- and atmosphere. Chemosphere will publish: • Original communications (Research Papers) describing important new discoveries or further developments in important fields of investigation • Review Articles, mainly of new developing areas (note that we do NOT publish bibliometric reviews) • Short communications • Letters to the Editor • Special, themed issues on relevant topics All papers should demonstrate a high level of novelty, originality and uniqueness. The following sections and subject fields are included: Environmental Chemistry This section will publish manuscripts dealing with fundamental processes in the environment that are related to the analysis, behavior, fate, and alteration of organic and inorganic contaminants focused on the dynamics of contaminants in environmental compartments such as water, soil, sediment, particulate matter, organisms, dust and indoor/outdoor air. Only studies that are of significance to an international audience, include sites of particular global interest, or lend themselves to interpretation at the global level should be submitted. Topics of specific interest include, but not limited to, are: • All aspects of emerging contaminants, such as pharmaceuticals, pesticides, flame retardants, other industrial chemicals, persistent organic pollutants, endocrine disruptors, etc. • All aspects of trace elements, organometals, metalloids (e.g., arsenic) and radionuclides • Environmental fate studies including transport, biodegradation, bio-accumulation and/or deposition, atmospheric (photo)chemical processes, hydrolysis, adsorption/desorption • Transformation and mineralisation of chemicals (e.g., by bio- and photo degradation, redox processes and hydrolysis) • Novel environmental analytical methods including case studies • Environmental modelling and quantitative structure-activity relationships to study fate and environmental dynamics • Monitoring studies presenting new strategies, report of novel contaminants, findings or interpretations of interest for an international readership. • Passive sampling • Non-target and suspect screening (e.g. effect-directed analysis) • Natural marine toxins • Nanopolymers, nanocomposites, and microplastics in the environment The following studies are not considered for publication: studies on (micro)organisms (unless chemicals are clearly involved), monitoring studies based on standard methodology, and/or only of regional importance, studies dealing only with nutrients in agricultural ecosystems, pesticide application studies, plant physiology studies, studies on improvement of crops and purely analytical methodology studies. As regards papers on air pollution, we focus on contaminants in air, particulate matter studies and also consider papers on NOX, SOX or ozone. Toxicology and Risk Assessment The section on Environmental Toxicology and Risk Assessment covers all aspects of toxicology, i.e., the science of adverse effects of chemicals on living organisms including humans, and the scientific risk assessment. Topics of specific interest include, but not limited to, are: • Adverse effects of chemicals in environmental, aquatic and terrestrial, organisms • Similar studies in experimental organisms (under laboratory conditions) • Epidemiological studies on effects of chemicals in humans • Biochemical studies related to mechanisms of adverse effects • Toxicokinetics and metabolic studies on chemicals related to adverse effects • Development and validation of testing methods based on living organisms or biological materials • Adaptation • Human biomonitoring • Elucidation of mechanisms of toxic effects • DNA and protein adducts • In vitro assays and omics techniques • Phytotoxicity Not considered are, e.g., studies that report only concentrations of chemicals in the environment, living organisms, food or other materials etc. and studies on biochemical effects of chemicals non-relevant to toxicology. Treatment and Remediation This section deals with papers about technologies that manage and/or reduce environmental contaminants, including reuse and recycling processes. The technology must be beyond a basic laboratory study or have obvious implications for current or potential treatment or remediation technologies and, for example, for any advanced oxidation process, the intermediates and/or the extent of mineralization of the targeted compound(s) and wastes must be quantified. Topics of specific interest include, but not limited to, are: • Advanced water and wastewater treatment processes and sludge management • Produced water • Drinking water • Incineration • Remediation including bio/phytoremediation employing new strategies • Hydraulic fracturing • Use of biochar amended soil to bind (e.g., herbicides) • Nanotechnology • Advanced oxidation processes • Photolysis/photocatalysis and electrochemical and photo-assisted electrochemical methods • Sonolysis/sonocatalysis • Mechanochemical destruction (MCD) • Natural treatment systems (riverbank filtration and aquifer recharge/recovery) • Characterization of natural and effluent organic matter • Technologies for recycle/reuse ( e.g., of microbial fuel cell techniques) • Gasification/pyrolysis for biomass-to-energy and energy recovery from waste streams Not considered are studies that focus on the synthesis of new materials to be used in waste water purification or remediation. Studies focusing on the removal of single contaminants are often less interesting for publication.
CiteScore
Subject | Rank | Percentile |
---|---|---|
MedicinePublic Health, Environmental and Occupational Health |
11 / 665 | 98% |
Journal Statistics
Submission Information
Submission Website:
https://www.editorialmanager.com/CHEMOSPHEREAccepted Types:
Related Articles
The dilemma between acid and base catalysis in the synthesis of benzimidazole from o-phenylenediamine and carbon dioxide‡
Martin Hulla, Simon Nussbaum, Alexy R. Bonnin, Paul J. Dyson
DOI: 10.1039/C9CC06156H
Retraction: Chemical synthesis and antigenic activity of a phosphatidylinositol mannoside epitope from Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Shi-Yuan Zhao, Na Li, Wan-Yue Luo, Nan-Nan Zhang, Rong-Ye Zhou, Chen-Yu Li
DOI: 10.1039/D1CC90195H
Vapor-fed photoelectrolysis of water at 0.3 V using gas-diffusion photoanodes of SrTiO3 layers
Hyosuke Mukohara, Hiroki Sato, Chihiro Tateishi, Hiromasa Sato
DOI: 10.1039/C9SE01068H
Pulsed laser rusted stainless steel: a robust electrode material applied for energy storage and generation applications
Namachivayam Karthik, Tian Tian, Thomas Nesakumar Jebakumar Immanuel Edison, Raji Atchudan, Yong Rok Lee, Seongbeom Kim, Dangsheng Xiong
DOI: 10.1039/C9SE00676A
Mechanically stable and economically viable polyvinyl alcohol-based membranes with sulfonated carbon nanotubes for proton exchange membrane fuel cells
R. Vani, S. Ramaprabhu, Prathap Haridoss
DOI: 10.1039/C9SE01031A
In situ growth of all-inorganic perovskite nanocrystals on black phosphorus nanosheets
Hao Huang, Jia Li, Ya Yi, Jiahong Wang, Yihong Kang, Paul K. Chu, H. C. Ong, Xue-Feng Yu
DOI: 10.1039/C8CC00029H
Developing a novel high performance NaNbO3-based lead-free dielectric capacitor for energy storage applications
DOI: 10.1039/C9SE00836E
Redox responsive Pluronic micelle mediated delivery of functional siRNA: a modular nano-assembly for targeted delivery
Sandeep Kadekar, Ganesh N. Nawale, Vadim Le Joncour, Pirjo Laakkonen, Jöns Hilborn, Oommen P. Varghese, Oommen P. Oommen
DOI: 10.1039/D1BM00428J
Surface structure-dependent electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 to C1 products on SnO2 catalysts
Minling Fang, Zhiping Zheng, Jiayu Chen, Qian Chen, Deyu Liu, Binbin Xu, Jianyang Wu, Qin Kuang
DOI: 10.1039/C9SE00678H
Novel aqueous amine looping approach for the direct capture, conversion and storage of CO2 to produce magnesium carbonate
Meishen Liu, Hassnain Asgar, Soenke Seifert, Greeshma Gadikota
DOI: 10.1039/C9SE00316A