4.8 Article

Extraction and Quantification of Nanoparticulate Mercury in Natural Soils

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 3, Pages 1763-1770

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.1c07039

Keywords

mercury; nanoparticles; particle number; soils; extraction

Funding

  1. Youth Innovation Promotion Association, Chinese Academy of Sciences [2020314]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41977355]

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This study developed a standardized protocol using single particle inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry to extract and quantify nanoparticulate mercury in different soils. The study found a significant presence of indigenous Hg-NPs in soils, accounting for 3-40% of the total mercury mass.
Nanoparticulate mercury (Hg-NPs) are ubiquitous in nature. However, the lack of data on their concentration in soils impedes reliable risk assessments. This is due to the analytical difficulties resulting from low ambient Hg concentrations and background interferences of heterogeneous soil components. Here, coupled to single particle inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (spICP-MS), a standardized protocol was developed for extraction and quantification of Hg-NPs in natural soils with a wide range of properties. High particle number-, particle mass-, and total mass-based recoveries were obtained for spiked HgS-NPs (74-120%). Indigenous Hg-NPs across soils were within 10(7)-10(11) NPs g(-1), corresponding to 3-40% of total Hg on a mass basis. Metacinnabar was the primary Hg species in extracted samples from the Wanshan mercury mining site, as characterized by X-ray absorption spectroscopy and transmission electron microscopy. In agreement with the spICP-MS analysis, electron microscopy revealed comparable size distribution for nanoparticles larger than 27 nm. These indigenous Hg-NPs contributed to 5-65% of the measured methylmercury in soils. This work paves the way for experimental determinations of indigenous Hg-NPs in natural soils, which is critical to understand the biogeochemical cycling of mercury and thereby the methylation processes governing the public exposure to methylmercury.

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