Abstract

Measurements of gas–particle-partitioning coefficients for reactive mercury in dry urban and laboratory aerosol were found to strongly depend on ambient temperature. Samples of atmospheric and laboratory aerosols (defined as both the gas and particle phases) were collected using filter and absorbent methods and analyzed for reactive mercury using thermal desorption combined with cold vapor atomic fluorescence spectroscopy. Synthetic ambient aerosols were generated in the laboratory from ammonium sulfate and adipic acid mixed with mercuric chloride in a purpose-built aerosol reactor. The aerosol reactor was operated in a temperature-controlled laboratory. Linear relationships between the logarithm of inverse gas–particle partitioning and inverse temperature were observed and parameterized for use in the atmospheric modeling of reactive mercury. Reactive mercury was observed to partition from the particle to the gas phase as ambient temperature increased. Good agreement between measurements made using urban and laboratory aerosols was seen after gas–particle-partitioning coefficients were normalized for surface area instead of mass. Thermodynamic analyses of the urban and laboratory gas–particle-partitioning measurements revealed that the strength of interaction between reactive mercury and particle surfaces was suggestive of chemisorption. Gas–particle-partitioning coefficients made with the Tekran ambient mercury analyzer (AMA) also showed a dependence on temperature. However, the Tekran AMA partitioning coefficients did not agree well with partitioning coefficients measured using the filter-based methods. The disagreement is consistent with the 50 °C operational temperature of the Tekran AMA.

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