| CADMIUM FACT SHEET
Brief Overview: Contaminant:
Cadmium Category: Inorganic MCL:
Source: Batteries, paints Effect:
Kidney effects Followup: Treatment:
Coagulation/Filtration, Ion Exchange, RO Details:
Source: Cadmium is a metal found in natural deposits
as ores containing other elements. The greatest use of cadmium is primarily for
metal plating and coating operations, including transportation equipment, machinery
and baking enamels, photography, television phosphors. It is also used in nickel-cadmium
and solar batteries and in pigments. 2.9 million lbs. of cadmium were
produced in the US in 1986, and nearly twice that amount was imported in the same
year. Cadmium occurs naturally in zinc, lead, copper and other ores which can
serve as sources to ground and surface waters, especially when in contact with
soft, acidic waters. Major industrial releases of cadmium are due to waste streams
and leaching of landfills, and from a variety of operations that involve cadmium
or zinc. In particular, cadmium can be released to drinking water from the corrosion
of some galvanized plumbing and water main pipe materials. From 1987
to 1993, according to EPAs Toxic Chemical Release Inventory, cadmium releases
were primarily from zinc, lead and copper smelting and refining industries, with
the largest releases occurring in Arizona and Utah. What happens to
Cadmium when it is released to the environment? Some cadmium compounds are able
to leach through soils to ground water. When cadmium compounds do bind to the
sediments of rivers, they can be more easily bioaccumulated or re-dissolved when
sediments are disturbed, such as during flooding. Its tendency to accumulate in
aquatic life is great in some species, low in others. Effect:
Short-term: EPA has found cadmium to potentially cause the following
health effects when people are exposed to it at levels above the MCL for relatively
short periods of time: nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, muscle cramps, salivation,
sensory disturbances, liver injury, convulsions, shock and renal failure.
Long-term: Cadmium has the potential to cause the following effects from
a lifetime exposure at levels above the MCL: kidney, liver, bone and blood damage.
Followup: Treatment: Coagulation/Filtration,
Ion Exchange, Lime Softening, Reverse Osmosis. |