R6 class objects of class chent represent chemical entities and can hold a list of information loaded from a chemical yaml file in their chyaml field. Such information is extracted and optionally aggregated by this function.

endpoint(chent, medium = "soil", type = c("degradation", "sorption"),
  lab_field = c(NA, "laboratory", "field"), redox = c(NA, "aerobic",
  "anaerobic"), value = c("DT50ref", "Kfoc", "N"),
  aggregator = geomean, raw = FALSE, signif = 3)

soil_DT50(chent, aggregator = geomean, signif = 3,
  lab_field = "laboratory", value = "DT50ref", redox = "aerobic",
  raw = FALSE)

soil_Kfoc(chent, aggregator = geomean, signif = 3, value = "Kfoc",
  raw = FALSE)

soil_N(chent, aggregator = mean, signif = 3, raw = FALSE)

soil_sorption(chent, values = c("Kfoc", "N"), aggregators = c(Kfoc =
  geomean, Koc = geomean, N = mean), signif = c(Kfoc = 3, N = 3),
  raw = FALSE)

Arguments

chent

The chent object to get the information from

medium

The medium for which information is sought

type

The information type

lab_field

If not NA, do we want laboratory or field endpoints

redox

If not NA, are we looking for aerobic or anaerobic data

value

The name of the value we want. The list given in the usage section is not exclusive

aggregator

The aggregator function. Can be mean, geomean, or identity, for example.

raw

Should the number(s) be returned as stored in the chent object (could be a character value) to retain original information about precision?

signif

How many significant digits do we want

values

The values to be returned

aggregators

A named vector of aggregator functions to be used

Value

The result from applying the aggregator function to the values converted to a numeric vector, rounded to the given number of significant digits, or, if raw = TRUE, the values as a character value, retaining any implicit information on precision that may be present.

Details

The functions soil_* are functions to extract soil specific endpoints. For the Freundlich exponent, the capital letter N is used in order to facilitate dealing with such data in R. In pesticide fate modelling, this exponent is often called 1/n.