A new approach for the measurement of gaseous elemental mercury (GEM) and H 2 S in air from anthropogenic and natural sources: Examples from Mt. Amiata (Siena, Central Italy) and Solfatara Crater (Campi Flegrei, Southern Italy)

2017 ◽  
Vol 175 ◽  
pp. 48-58 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacopo Cabassi ◽  
Franco Tassi ◽  
Stefania Venturi ◽  
Sergio Calabrese ◽  
Francesco Capecchiacci ◽  
...  
Processes ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (10) ◽  
pp. 1282
Author(s):  
Marta Lazzaroni ◽  
Barbara Nisi ◽  
Daniele Rappuoli ◽  
Jacopo Cabassi ◽  
Orlando Vaselli

Mercury is a toxic and noxious element and is the only metal that naturally occurs as gas. One of the most challenging topics (included in the United Nations Minimata convention) is to understand the adsorption–release processes of manmade materials (e.g., concrete, bricks, tiles, painting). Adsorption of Hg by construction and demolition waste materials has recently been studied, but investigations on how much Hg0 can be released from these products are rather poor. The abandoned mining site of Abbadia San Salvatore (Siena, central Italy) where, for about one century, cinnabar was roasted to produce liquid mercury, is known for the high concentrations of (i) Hg0 in edifices and structures and (ii) total and leachate Hg in synthetic materials. In the present paper, a new, simple and low-cost method to measure the amount of GEM (Gaseous Elemental Mercury) released from anthropic materials (concrete, wall rocks, and tiles) located in the Hg0-rich environments of the former mining site, is proposed. The efficiency of a specific paint that was supposed to act as blocking agent to Hg0 was also tested.


2013 ◽  
Vol 35 ◽  
pp. 142-153 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Tassi ◽  
B. Nisi ◽  
C. Cardellini ◽  
F. Capecchiacci ◽  
M. Donnini ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Orlando Vaselli ◽  
Barbara Nisi ◽  
Daniele Rappuoli ◽  
Jacopo Cabassi ◽  
Franco Tassi

Mercury has a strong environmental impact since both its organic and inorganic forms are toxic and it represents a pollutant of global concern. Liquid Hg is highly volatile and it can be released during natural and anthropogenic processes in the hydrosphere, biosphere and atmosphere. In this study the distribution of Gaseous Elemental Mercury (GEM) and the total and leached mercury concentrations on paints, plasters, roof tiles, concretes, metals, dust and wood structures were determined in the main buildings and structures of the former Hg-mining area of Abbadia San Salvatore (Siena, Central Italy). The mining complex (divided into 7 units) covers a surface of about 65 ha and contains mining structures and managers and workers buildings. In this work, nine surveys of GEM measurements were carried out from July 2011 to August 2015 for the buildings and structures located in the units 2, 3 and 6. Moreover, detailed measurements were performed in February, April, July, September and December 2016 in the edifices and mining structures of Unit 6. GEM concentrations showed a strong variability in terms of space and time mostly depending on the distance from the building hosting driers, furnaces and condensers and ambient temperature, respectively. In the Unit 2 surveys carried out in the hotter period (from June to September) showed GEM concentrations up to 27,500 ng m−3, while in the Unit 6 they were on average much higher and occasionally they saturated the GEM measurement device (>50,000 ng m−3). Concentrations of total (in mg kg−1) and leached (in μg L−1) mercury measured in different building materials (up to 46,580 mg kg−1 and 4,470 mg L−1 for total and leached mercury, respectively) showed for the same type of material highly variable values in dependence on the edifice or mining structure from which they were collected. The results obtained in this study are of relevant interest for the operational cleanings to be carried out during the reclamation activities.


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