4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Characterization of soils from an industrial complex contaminated with elemental mercury

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 125, Issue -, Pages 20-29

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2013.03.013

Keywords

Analytical methods; Elemental mercury; Industrial contamination; Soil

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Historical use of liquid elemental mercury (Hg(0)(I)) at the Y-12 National Security Complex in Oak Ridge, TN, USA, resulted in large deposits of Hg(0)(I) in the soils. The fate and distribution of the spilled Hg(0) are not well characterized. In this study we evaluated analytical tools for characterizing the speciation of Hg in the contaminated soils and then used the analytical techniques to examine the speciation of Hg in two soil cores collected at the site. These include x-ray fluorescence (XRF), soil Hg(0) headspace analysis, and total Hg determination by acid digestion coupled with cold vapor atomic absorption (HgT). XRF was not found to be suitable for evaluating Hg concentrations in heterogeneous soils containing low concentration of Hg or Hg(0) because Hg concentrations determined using this method were lower than those determined by HgT analysis and the XRF detection limit is 20 mg/kg. Hg(0)(g) headspace analysis coupled with HgT measurements yielded good results for examining the presence of Hg(0)(I) in soils and the speciation of Hg. The two soil cores are highly heterogeneous in both the depth and extent of Hg contamination, with Hg concentrations ranging from 0.05 to 8400 mg/kg. In the first core, Hg(0)(I) was distributed throughout the 3.2 m depth, whereas the second core, from a location 12 m away, contained Hg(0)(I) in a 0.3 m zone only. Sequential extractions showed organically associated Hg dominant at depths with low Hg concentration. Soil from the zone of groundwater saturation showed reducing conditions and the Hg is likely present as Hg-sulfide species. At this depth, lateral Hg transport in the groundwater may be a source of Hg detected in the soil at the deeper soil depths. Overall, characterization of soils containing Hg(0)(I) is difficult because of the heterogeneous distribution of Hg within the soils. This is exacerbated in industrial facilities where fill materials make up much of the soils and historical and continued reworking of the subsurface has remobilized the Hg. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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