Abstract

Abstract. Long-term continuous measurements of speciated atmospheric mercury were conducted from July 2013 to June 2014 in Hefei, a midlatitude inland city in eastern central China that experiences frequent haze pollution. The mean concentrations (±standard deviation) of gaseous elemental mercury (GEM), gaseous oxidized mercury (GOM) and particle-bound mercury (PBM) were 3.95 ± 1.93 ng m−3, 2.49 ± 2.41 and 23.3 ± 90.8 pg m−3, respectively, on non-haze days, and 4.74 ± 1.62 ng m−3, 4.32 ± 8.36 and 60.2 ± 131.4 pg m−3, respectively, on haze days. Potential source contribution function (PSCF) analysis suggested that atmospheric mercury pollution on haze days was caused primarily by local emissions, instead of via long-range transport. The poorer mixing conditions on haze days also favored the accumulation of atmospheric mercury. Compared to GEM and GOM, PBM was especially sensitive to haze pollution. The mean PBM concentration on haze days was 2.5 times that on non-haze days due to elevated concentrations of particulate matter. PBM also showed a clear seasonal trend; its concentration was the highest in fall and winter, decreased rapidly in spring and was the lowest in summer, following the same order in the frequency of haze days in different seasons. On both non-haze and haze days, GOM concentrations remained low at night, but increased rapidly just before sunrise, which could be due to diurnal variation in air exchange between the boundary layer and free troposphere. However, non-haze and haze days showed different trends in daytime GEM and GOM concentrations. On non-haze days, GEM and GOM declined synchronously through the afternoon, probably due to the retreat of the free tropospheric air as the height of the atmospheric boundary layer increases. In contrast, on haze days, GOM and GEM showed opposite trends with the highest GOM and lowest GEM observed in the afternoon, suggesting the occurrence of photochemical oxidation. This is supported by simple box-model calculations, which showed that oxidation of GEM to GOM does occur and that the transport of free tropospheric GOM alone is not large enough to account for the observed increase in daytime GOM. Our results further postulate that NO2 aggregation with the HgOH intermediate may be a potential mechanism for the enhanced production of GOM during daytime.

Highlights

  • Mercury (Hg) is an environmental pollutant that has received much global attention because of its toxicity and bioaccumulation in the aquatic ecosystems

  • The sum of these three types of atmospheric speciated mercury is defined as total atmospheric mercury (TAM = gaseous elemental mercury (GEM) + gaseous oxidized mercury (GOM) + particlebound mercury (PBM)), and the sum of GEM and GOM is known as total gaseous mercury (TGM = GEM + GOM) (Gustin and Jaffe, 2010; Gustin et al, 2015)

  • The time series of GEM, GOM and PBM concentrations at the study site throughout the study period are shown in Fig. 2; their frequency distributions are shown in Fig. S1 in the Supplement

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Summary

Introduction

Mercury (Hg) is an environmental pollutant that has received much global attention because of its toxicity and bioaccumulation in the aquatic ecosystems. Atmospheric mercury is commonly differentiated into three forms: gaseous elemental mercury (GEM), gaseous oxidized mercury (GOM) and particlebound mercury (PBM). GEM is stable in the troposphere with a long residence time (0.5– 2 years) and can be transported at the regional to global scale (Schroeder and Munthe, 1998; Lindberg et al, 2007). Different from GEM, GOM and PBM can be readily removed form the air by wet and dry deposition as a result of their high surface affinity and water solubility (Lindqvist and Rodhe, 1985). Chemical transformation between GEM, GOM and PBM will directly influence the atmospheric lifetime of mercury

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