A pilot study of different materials applied for active sampling of gaseous oxidized mercury in the atmospheric air

2017 
Abstract Samplers made with different materials were tested for the quantitative collection and recovery of mercury halides from the atmospheric air. The tested adsorbent materials included zirconia (ZrO 2 ), titania (TiO 2 ), melted SiO 2 (quartz wool) and potassium chloride (KCl). Different processes affecting the sampler efficiency were investigated specifically: breakthrough during sampling because of the surface passivation and loss of already collected mercury halides due to spontaneous reduction or due to the reaction with ozone. Reduction of mercury because of reaction with the atmospheric ozone appeared to be the major cause of the sample loss and it was inherent in all tested materials at a comparable extent. We hypothesized the zirconia layer covered on a ceramic substrate (patented) to be less sensitive to the ozone-caused reduction, inert to gaseous elemental mercury and completely insensitive to atmospheric humidity. In addition, zirconia samplers were highly resistant to heating and they could be used for multiple adsorption/desorption cycles avoiding degradation in the atmospheric air. Key results of the zirconia sampler tests with mercury halides were: the collection efficiency of >98%; reduction with 50 ppb ozone in the first 4 min of exposition to the atmospheric air ─ 6% ±1%; spontaneous reduction at 50 °C in the first 4 min after spiking ─
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