Atmospheric mercury monitoring survey in Beijing, China

With the aid of one industrial, two urban, two suburban, and two rural sampling locations, diurnal patterns of total gaseous mercury (TGM) were monitored in January, February and September of 1998 in Beijing, China. Monitoring was conducted in six (two urban, two suburban, one rural and the industri...

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Published inChemosphere (Oxford) Vol. 48; no. 1; pp. 97 - 107
Main Authors Liu, Shili, Nadim, Farhad, Perkins, Chris, Carley, Robert J., Hoag, George E., Lin, Yuhan, Chen, Letian
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford Elsevier Ltd 01.07.2002
Elsevier
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Summary:With the aid of one industrial, two urban, two suburban, and two rural sampling locations, diurnal patterns of total gaseous mercury (TGM) were monitored in January, February and September of 1998 in Beijing, China. Monitoring was conducted in six (two urban, two suburban, one rural and the industrial sites) of the seven sampling sites during January and February (winter) and in four (two urban, one rural, and the industrial sites) of the sampling locations during September (summer) of 1998. In the three suburban sampling stations, mean TGM concentrations during the winter sampling period were 8.6, 10.7, and 6.2 ng/m 3, respectively. In the two urban sampling locations mean TGM concentrations during winter and summer sampling periods were 24.7, 8.3, 10, and 12.7 ng/m 3, respectively. In the suburban-industrial and the two rural sampling locations, mean mercury concentrations ranged from 3.1–5.3 ng/m 3 in winter to 4.1–7.7 ng/m 3 in summer sampling periods. In the Tiananmen Square (urban), and Shijingshan (suburban) sampling locations the mean TGM concentrations during the summer sampling period were higher than winter concentrations, which may have been caused by evaporation of soil-bound mercury in warm periods. Continuous meteorological data were available at one of the suburban sites, which allowed the observation of mercury concentration variations associated with some weather parameters. It was found that there was a moderate negative correlation between the wind speed and the TGM concentration at this suburban sampling location. It was also found that during the sampling period at the same site, the quantity of TGM transported to or from the sampling site was mainly influenced by the duration and frequency of wind occurrence from certain directions.
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ISSN:0045-6535
1879-1298
DOI:10.1016/S0045-6535(02)00026-7