4.7 Article

An evaluation of direct measurement techniques for mercury dry deposition

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 409, Issue 7, Pages 1320-1327

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2010.12.032

Keywords

Mercury; Dry deposition; Surrogate surface; Rural area; Acidified solution

Funding

  1. Great Lakes Atmospheric Deposition program
  2. National Science Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In this project, several surrogate surfaces designed to directly measure Hg dry deposition were investigated. Static water surrogate surfaces (SWSS) containing deionized (DI), acidified water, or salt solutions, and a knife-edge surrogate surface (KSS) using quartz fiber filters (QFF), KCI-coated QFF and gold-coated QFF were evaluated as a means to directly measure mercury (Hg) dry deposition. The SWSS was hypothesized to collect deposited elemental mercury (Hg-0), reactive gaseous/oxidized mercury (KM), and mercury associated with particulate matter (Hg-(p)) while the QFF, KCI-coated QFF, and gold-coated QFF on the KSS were hypothesized to collect Hg-(p), RGM + Hg-(p), and Hg-0 + RGM + Hg-(p), respectively. The Hg flux measured by the DI water was significantly smaller than that captured by the acidified water, probably because Hg-0 was oxidized to Hg2+ which stabilized the deposited Hg and decreased mass transfer resistance. Acidified BrCl, which efficiently oxidizes Hg-0, captured significantly more Hg than other solutions. However, of all collection media, gold-coated QFFs captured 6 to 100 times greater Hg mass than the other surfaces, probably because there is no surface resistance for Hg-0 deposition to gold surfaces. In addition, the Hg-0 concentration is usually 100-1000 times higher than RGM and Hg-(p). For all other media, co-located samples were not significantly different, and the combination of daytime plus nighttime results were comparable to 24-h samples, implying that Hg-0, RGM and Hg-(p) were not released after they deposited nor did the surfaces reach equilibrium with the atmosphere. Based on measured Hg ambient air concentrations and fluxes, dry deposition velocities of RGM and Hg-0 to DI water and other surfaces were 5.6 +/- 5.4 and 0.005-0.68 cm s(-1) in this study, respectively. These results suggest surrogate surfaces can be used to measure Hg dry deposition; however, extrapolating the results to natural surface can be challenging. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available