Soil and ambient air mercury as an indicator of coal-fired power plant emissions: a case study in North China

Author(s):  
Zhonggen Li ◽  
Xufeng Chen ◽  
Wenli Liu ◽  
Taishan Li ◽  
Guangle Qiu ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 183 (4) ◽  
pp. 1677-1703
Author(s):  
Chanmin Kim ◽  
Lucas R. F. Henneman ◽  
Christine Choirat ◽  
Corwin M. Zigler

2003 ◽  
Vol 37 (6) ◽  
pp. 815-826 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ying Zhou ◽  
Jonathan I Levy ◽  
James K Hammitt ◽  
John S Evans

Atmosphere ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 73
Author(s):  
Mae Sexauer Gustin ◽  
Sarrah M. Dunham-Cheatham ◽  
Jiaoyan Huang ◽  
Steve Lindberg ◽  
Seth N. Lyman

This review focuses on providing the history of measurement efforts to quantify and characterize the compounds of reactive mercury (RM), and the current status of measurement methods and knowledge. RM collectively represents gaseous oxidized mercury (GOM) and that bound to particles. The presence of RM was first recognized through measurement of coal-fired power plant emissions. Once discovered, researchers focused on developing methods for measuring RM in ambient air. First, tubular KCl-coated denuders were used for stack gas measurements, followed by mist chambers and annular denuders for ambient air measurements. For ~15 years, thermal desorption of an annular KCl denuder in the Tekran® speciation system was thought to be the gold standard for ambient GOM measurements. Research over the past ~10 years has shown that the KCl denuder does not collect GOM compounds with equal efficiency, and there are interferences with collection. Using a membrane-based system and an automated system—the Detector for Oxidized mercury System (DOHGS)—concentrations measured with the KCl denuder in the Tekran speciation system underestimate GOM concentrations by 1.3 to 13 times. Using nylon membranes it has been demonstrated that GOM/RM chemistry varies across space and time, and that this depends on the oxidant chemistry of the air. Future work should focus on development of better surfaces for collecting GOM/RM compounds, analytical methods to characterize GOM/RM chemistry, and high-resolution, calibrated measurement systems.


2020 ◽  
pp. 107554702098044
Author(s):  
P. Sol Hart ◽  
Lauren Feldman

This experiment examines how framing power plant emissions in terms of air pollution or climate change, and in terms of health or environmental impacts, influences perceived benefits and costs of policies to reduce emissions and intentions to take political action that supports such policies. A moderated-mediation model reveals that focusing on air pollution, instead of climate change, has a positive significant indirect influence on intended political action through the serial mediators of perceived benefits and costs. Political ideology moderates the association between perceived benefits and political action. No framing effects are observed in the comparison between health and environmental impacts.


2014 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 438-457 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sergey Paltsev ◽  
Valerie Karplus ◽  
Henry Chen ◽  
Ioanna Karkatsouli ◽  
John Reilly ◽  
...  

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