A passive integrative sampler for mercury vapor in air and neutral mercury species in water.
Metadata:
- Identification_Information:
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- Citation:
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- Citation_Information:
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- Originator: W.G. Brumbaugh, J.D. Petty, T.W. May, J.N. Huckins
- Originator:
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U.S. Geological Survey, Biological Resources
Division, Columbia Environmental Research Center
- Publication_Date: 1999
- Title:
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A passive integrative sampler for mercury vapor in
air and neutral mercury species in water.
- Publication_Information:
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- Publication_Place: Columbia, Missouri
- Publisher:
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U.S. Geological Survey, Biological Resources
Division, Columbia Environmental Research Center
- Description:
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- Abstract:
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A passive integrative mercury sampler (PIMS) based
on a sealed polymeric membrane was effective for
the collection and preconcentration of Hg0.
Because the Hg is both oxidized and stabilized in
the PIMS, sampling intervals of weeks to months
are possible. The effective air sampling rate for
a 15 x 2.5 cm device was about 2 liter
equivalents/day (0.002 m3/day) and the detection
limit for 4-week sampling was about 2 ng/m3 for
conventional ICP-MS determination without
cleanroom preparation. Sampling precision was <
5% RSD for laboratory exposures, and 5-10% RSD for
field exposure. These results suggest that the
PIMS could be useful for screening assessments of
Hg contamination and exposure in the environment,
the laboratory, and the workplace. The PIMS
approach may be particularly useful for
applications requiring unattended sampling for
extended periods at remote locations. Preliminary
results indicate that sampling for dissolved
gaseous mercury (DGM) and potentially other
neutral mercury species from water is also
feasible. Rigorous validation of the sampler
performance is currently in progress.
- Purpose:
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Monitoring efforts of mercury emissions associated
with fossil fuel burning and waste incineration
have increased in recent years because of a
growing body of evidence implicating these sources
of airborne Hg in the eventual bioaccumulation in
fish in watersheds far removed from Hg point
sources. Because of the normally low ambient
concentrations and the potential for
contaminantion artifacts, sampling and analysis of
Hg from air or water requires facilities and
technical skills that relatively few analytical
laboratories possess. The investigators developed
a passive integrative mercury sampler (PIMS) for
sampling of Hg0 that is relatively simple to use
and may potentially be utilized by laboratories
not equipped with low-level Hg analytical
facilities. Furthermore, the PIMS approach may be
particularly useful for applications requiring
unattended sampling for extended periods at remote
locations.
- Time_Period_of_Content:
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- Time_Period_Information:
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- Range_of_Dates/Times:
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- Beginning_Date: 199708
- Ending_Date: 199710
- Currentness_Reference: observed
- Status:
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- Progress: Complete
- Maintenance_and_Update_Frequency: None planned
- Keywords:
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- Theme:
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- Theme_Keyword_Thesaurus: None
- Theme_Keyword: mercury
- Theme_Keyword: sampling
- Theme_Keyword: air
- Theme_Keyword: water
- Theme_Keyword: passive
- Access_Constraints: none
- Use_Constraints: none
- Point_of_Contact:
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- Contact_Information:
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- Contact_Organization_Primary:
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- Contact_Organization:
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U.S. Geological Survey, Biological Resourcs
Division, Columbia Environmental Research Center
- Contact_Person: William G. Brumbaugh
- Contact_Address:
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- Address_Type: mailing and physical address
- Address: 4200 New Haven Road
- City: Columbia
- State_or_Province: Missouri
- Postal_Code: 65201
- Contact_Voice_Telephone: (573) 876-1857
- Contact_Facsimile_Telephone: (573) 876-1896
- Contact_Electronic_Mail_Address: William_Brumbaugh@usgs.gov
- Cross_Reference:
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- Citation_Information:
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- Originator: W.G. Brumbaugh, J.D. Petty, T.W. May, J.N. Huckins
- Originator:
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U.S. Geological Survey, Biological Resources
Division, Columbia Environmental Research Center
- Publication_Date: 2000
- Title:
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A passive integrative sampler for mercury vapor in
air and neutral mercury species in water.
- Series_Information:
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- Series_Name: Chemosphere: Global Change Science
- Issue_Identification: 2
- Other_Citation_Details: pp. 1-9
- Data_Quality_Information:
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- Attribute_Accuracy:
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- Attribute_Accuracy_Report: unknown
- Logical_Consistency_Report: not applicable
- Completeness_Report: unknown
- Lineage:
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- Methodology:
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- Methodology_Type: Lab
- Methodology_Identifier:
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- Methodology_Keyword_Thesaurus: None
- Methodology_Keyword: sampler preparation
- Methodology_Description:
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Segments of lay-flat low density polyethylene
(LDPE) tubing were cut to the desired length with
a steel scalpel. For preliminary experiments
including the reagent optimization, the PIMS
sampler consisted of a 15-cm length of tubing with
a 7.5 cm sealed section containing 1 ml of reagent
(i.e., ~38 cm2 active surface area). For most
other experiments, the sampler consisted of a
15-cm length to contain either 10 or 20 ml reagent
(active surface area of ~76 cm2) plus an
additional 5-10 cm segment to allow for loops or
tags on the end for purposes of suspending or
hanging the PIMS. A one-liter volume of the PIMS
reagent was prepared fresh weekly by diluting the
appropriate amounts of sub-boiled nitric acid and
gold stock solutions with high-purity laboratory
deionized water in a glass volumetric flask. One
end each of each PIMS was heat-sealed, the
exterior was rinsed with acetone, and the tubing
was filled with 10% HNO3, 1ppm Au3+ and allowed to
soak overnight to extract Hg from the tubing prior
to use.
- Methodology_Citation:
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- Citation_Information:
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- Originator: W. G. Brumbaugh
- Publication_Date: unknown
- Title: Passive integrative mercury sampler (PIMS).
- Other_Citation_Details:
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This methodology has been patented by U.S.
government application no: 09/195, 039.
- Methodology_Type: Lab
- Methodology_Identifier:
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- Methodology_Keyword_Thesaurus: None
- Methodology_Keyword: transfer and analysis
- Methodology_Description:
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After deployment, the exterior of each PIMS was
rinsed with dilute acid and methanol. A small 0.5
cm cut was made just below the heat seal on one
end of the sampler with an acid-rinsed stainless
steel scalpel. The PIMS was opened by pulling the
tag or loop and subsequently tearing the
polyethylene along the cut. The bulk of the liquid
contents were then carefully transferred to an
acid-cleaned 25 ml glass tube which was sealed
with a teflon-lined cap and a polypropylene cap
cover. Analysis of the liquid sampler reagent was
conducted by either flow-injection cold vapor
atomic absorption spectrophotometry without
amalgamation preconcentration, 1990) or
inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry
(ICP-MS) fitted with a Meinhard-type nebulizer.
The ICP-MS method yielded a slightly lower
detection limit (about 0.01 as compared to 0.04
micrograms/liter) and it was therefore used for
the determination of the environmentally deployed
samplers. Accuracy of instrument calibration
standards were verified to be within 5% by daily
analysis (at both the beginning and end) of a 0.50
ng/ml Hg solution prepared from a National
Institute of Standards and Technology reference
standard.
- Methodology_Citation:
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- Citation_Information:
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- Originator: Perkin-Elmer
- Publication_Date: 1995
- Title:
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Standard Operating Procedure Method 200.8 Using
Elan 6000, Rev. 1.0.
- Publication_Information:
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- Publication_Place: Norwalk, Connecticut
- Publisher: The Perkin-Elmer Corporation
- Methodology_Type: Lab
- Methodology_Identifier:
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- Methodology_Keyword_Thesaurus: None
- Methodology_Keyword: environmental air sampling
- Methodology_Description:
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A set of PIMSs containing 10 ml reagent were
deployed on the roof of a two-story building in
downtown Columbia, Missouri, from August through
October of 1997. The site is about 0.5 km
north/northeast of a coal-fired power plant, which
is a potential source of atmospheric Hg (Hanisch,
1998). Five sets of triplicate samplers were
deployed in all: three sequential 4-week
exposures; one 8-week exposure, and one 12-week
exposure. Samplers to be analyzed as method
blanks were also maintained in triplicate for each
of the five PIMS sets. The PIMSs were fabricated
with a 1 cm loop on each end for horizontal
deployment between two steel rods affixed to a
ring stand base. The base/rod assembly was
initially deployed with nine samplers to cover the
4-, 8-, and 12-week exposures. The three PIMSs
which were removed after the first 4-week interval
were immediately replaced with a new set of PIMSs
to monitor the second 4-week interval, and
likewise for the third 4-week interval.
- Methodology_Citation:
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- Citation_Information:
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- Originator: Hanisch, C.
- Publication_Date: 1998
- Title: Where is mercury coming from?
- Series_Information:
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- Series_Name: Environ. Sci. Tech.
- Issue_Identification: 32
- Other_Citation_Details: pp. 176-179.
- Methodology_Type: Lab
- Methodology_Identifier:
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- Methodology_Keyword_Thesaurus: None
- Methodology_Keyword: water sampling
- Methodology_Description:
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The water exposure experiment was conducted in the
laboratory similar to the reagent optimization
experiment (1-1 jars, 1 g of liquid Hg, 21 degrees
Centigrade, 10 ml reagent/PIMS), but with water in
the containers and a 24 hour Hg equilibration
period before the PIMS were added (2 per
container). One PIMS was removed after 1 week and
the second was removed after 2 weeks. Water
treatments included laboratory well water
(hardness about 250 ppm, pH 7.6) to simulate
freshwater environments and synthetic seawater
(about 30 ppt salinity, pH 8.0, prepared by
addition of common aquarium sea salt to deionized
water) to simulate marine environments. Analysis
of water for total Hg was preceded by digestion fo
20 ml samples with 1 ml 5% K2S2O8 and 0.5 ml HCl.
Water sampling was conducted at t=0, +7, and +14
days during the experiment.
- Process_Step:
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- Process_Description: unknown
- Process_Date: unknown
- Entity_and_Attribute_Information:
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- Overview_Description:
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- Entity_and_Attribute_Overview:
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Entity - mercury; Associated attributes -
temperature (degrees Centigrade), vapor pressure
(mm), equilibrium (air concentration, micrograms
per liter), sampled Hg (micrograms), sampling
rate.
- Entity_and_Attribute_Detail_Citation: unknown
- Distribution_Information:
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- Distributor:
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- Contact_Information:
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- Contact_Organization_Primary:
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- Contact_Organization:
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U.S. Geological Survey, Biological Resources
Division, Columbia Environmental Research Center
- Contact_Person: Christopher Henke
- Contact_Position: Webmaster
- Contact_Address:
-
- Address_Type: mailing and physical address
- Address: 4200 New Haven Rd
- City: Columbia
- State_or_Province: MO
- Postal_Code: 65201
- Contact_Voice_Telephone: 573-875-5399
- Contact_Facsimile_Telephone: 573-876-1896
- Contact_Electronic_Mail_Address: chris_henke@usgs.gov
- Distribution_Liability:
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Although these data have been processed
successfully on a computer system at the U.S.
Geological Survey, no warranty expressed or
implied is made regarding the accuracy or utility
of the data on any other system or for general or
scientific purposes, nor shall the act of
distribution constitute any such warranty. This
disclaimer applies both to individual use of the
data and aggregate use with other data. It is
strongly recommended that these data are directly
acquired from a U.S. Geological Survey server, and
not indirectly through other sources which may
have changed the data in some way. It is also
strongly recommended that careful attention be
paid to the contents of the metadata file
associated with these data. The U.S. Geological
Survey shall not be held liable for improper or
incorrect use of the data described and/or
contained herein.
- Custom_Order_Process: Please contact distributor.
- Metadata_Reference_Information:
-
- Metadata_Date: 200004
- Metadata_Review_Date: 200104
- Metadata_Contact:
-
- Contact_Information:
-
- Contact_Organization_Primary:
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- Contact_Organization:
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Raytheon Information Technology and Scientific
Services (ITSS)
- Contact_Person: Cheryl Solomon
- Contact_Position: Ecosystem Coordinator
- Contact_Address:
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- Address_Type: Mailing and Physical Address
- Address: 4500 Forbes Boulevard
- City: Lanham
- State_or_Province: MD
- Postal_Code: 20706
- Country: USA
- Contact_Voice_Telephone: 301 794-3049
- Contact_Facsimile_Telephone: 301 794-3164
- Contact_Electronic_Mail_Address: solomon@gcmd.nasa.gov
- Metadata_Standard_Name:
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NBII Content Standard for National Biological
Information Infrastructure Metadata
- Metadata_Standard_Version: December 1995
- Metadata_Access_Constraints: None
- Metadata_Use_Constraints: None
Generated by mp version 2.5.6 on Mon Jul 31 09:29:15 2000