4.7 Article

Isotopic investigation of sources and processes affecting gaseous and particulate bound mercury in the east coast, South Korea

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 891, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.164404

Keywords

Mercury; Stable isotope; Coastal; East Asia; Total gaseous mercury (TGM); Particulate bound mercury (PBM)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Understanding sources and processes affecting atmospheric mercury (Hg) is essential for targeted Hg management. This study used stable isotopes and air trajectories to characterize sources and processes of total gaseous Hg (TGM) and particulate bound Hg (PBM) in a coastal city in South Korea. The results showed that TGM evasion from the coastal surface of the East Sea and high latitude regions are important sources, while PBM is mainly sourced from local anthropogenic emissions and undergoes Hg2+ photo-reduction on particles. The study also identified a regional isotopic end-member that can be used to quantify the relative influence of local anthropogenic Hg emissions and complex processes affecting PBM in East Asia and other coastal regions.
Understanding sources and processes affecting atmospheric mercury (Hg) are key to enabling targeted Hg manage-ments under the Minamata Convention on Mercury. We employed stable isotopes (& delta;202Hg, & UDelta;199Hg, & UDelta;201Hg, & UDelta;200Hg, & UDelta;204Hg) and backward air trajectories to characterize sources and processes affecting total gaseous Hg (TGM) and par-ticulate bound Hg (PBM) in a coastal city, South Korea, subjected to atmospheric Hg sources of a local steel manufacturing industry, coastal evasion from the East Sea, and long-distance transport from East Asian countries. Based on the simulated airmasses and the isotopic comparison with TGM characterized from other urban, remote, and coastal sites, TGM evaded from the coastal surface of the East Sea (warm seasons) and from the land surface in high latitude regions (cold seasons) act as important sources relative to local anthropogenic emissions at our study lo-cation. Conversely, a significant relationship between & UDelta;199Hg and concentrations of PBM (r2 = 0.39, p < 0.05) and a seasonally uniform & UDelta;199Hg/& UDelta;201Hg slope (1.15), except for summer (0.26), suggest that PBM is generally sourced from local anthropogenic emissions and subjected to Hg2+ photo-reduction on particles. The striking isotopic similarity be-tween our PBM (& delta;202Hg; -0.86 to 0.49 %o, & UDelta;199Hg; -0.15 to 1.10 %o) and those previously characterized along the coastal and offshore regions of the Northwest Pacific (& delta;202Hg; -0.78 to 1.1 %o, & UDelta;199Hg; -0.22 to 0.47 %o) infer that anthropogenically emitted PBM from East Asia and those processed in the coastal atmosphere serves as a regional iso-topic end-member. The implementation of air pollution control devices can reduce local PBM, while regional and/or multilateral efforts are required to manage TGM evasion and transport. We also anticipate that the regional isotopic end-member can be used to quantify the relative influence of local anthropogenic Hg emissions and complex processes affecting PBM in East Asia and other coastal regions.

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