10 research outputs found
Correction of Alcohol-Induced Damage to Mitochondria in Cardiac and Cerebral Cells by Derivatives of Neuroactive Amino Acids
Temperature selection and the final thermal preferendum of snow crab (Chionoecetes opilio, Decapoda) from the Barents Sea
First record and potential for red king crab Paralithodes camtschaticus (Crustacea Decapoda Lithodidae) population establishment in the White Sea
Source Characterization of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons by Using Their Molecular Indices: An Overview of Possibilities
The Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs or polyaromatic hydrocarbons) have been extensively studied to understand their distribution, fate and effects in the environment (Haftka 2009; Laane et al. 1999, 2006, 2013; Okuda et al. 2002; Page et al. 1999; Pavlova and Ivanova 2003; Stout et al. 2001a; Zhang et al. 2005). They are organic compounds consisting of conjoined aromatic rings without heteroatoms (Schwarzenbach et al. 2003). Sander and Wise (1997) list 660 parent PAH compounds (i.e., aromatic substances without alkyl groups and consisting solely of fused rings connected to each other), ranging from the monocyclic molecule of benzene (molecular weight = 78) up to nine-ringed structures (MW up to 478). PAHs containing one or more alkyl groups are called alkyl PAHs. Our study deals with the parent compounds (without alkyl groups and/or heteroatoms), the alkyl PAHs (denoted as PAHn, with n referring to the number of methyl groups; see footnotes in Table 1), and certain heterocyclic sulfur PAHs (dibenzothiophenes). The term PAHs includes all the above, unless explicitly specified. In Table 1, we present the nomenclature of PAHs used in this paper
