4.8 Article

Evidence against Rapid Mercury Oxidation in Photochemical Smog

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 16, Pages 11225-11235

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.2c02224

Keywords

mercury; oxidation; ozone; model; chemical mechanism

Funding

  1. United States National Science Foundation [1700722, 1700711, 1951513]
  2. Uintah Impact Mitigation Special Service District
  3. Directorate For Geosciences
  4. Div Atmospheric & Geospace Sciences [1951513, 1700711, 1700722] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The understanding of atmospheric mercury chemistry, especially under conditions of anthropogenic photochemical pollution, is still uncertain. Previous studies have shown rapid increases in oxidized mercury under polluted conditions, but it has not been clearly demonstrated that this is the result of local mercury oxidation. Our research suggests that rapid gas-phase mercury oxidation by ozone and OH in photochemical smog is unlikely.
Mercury pollution is primarily emitted to the atmosphere, and atmospheric transport and chemical processes determine its fate in the environment, but scientific understanding of atmospheric mercury chemistry is clouded in uncertainty. Mercury oxidation by atomic bromine in the Arctic and the upper atmosphere is well established, but less is understood about oxidation pathways in conditions of anthropogenic photochemical smog. Many have observed rapid increases in oxidized mercury under polluted conditions, but it has not been clearly demonstrated that these increases are the result of local mercury oxidation. We measured elemental and oxidized mercury in an area that experienced abundant photochemical activity (ozone >100 ppb) during winter inversion (i.e., cold air pools) conditions that restricted entrainment of air from the oxidized mercury-rich upper atmosphere. Under these conditions, oxidized mercury concentrations decreased day-upon-day, even as ozone and other pollutants increased dramatically. A box model that incorporated rapid kinetics for reactions of elemental mercury with ozone and OH radical overestimated observed oxidized mercury, while incorporation of slower, more widely accepted reaction rates did not. Our results show that rapid gas-phase mercury oxidation by ozone and OH in photochemical smog is unlikely.

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