4.8 Article

An Elemental Mercury Diffusion Coefficient for Natural Waters Determined by Molecular Dynamics Simulation

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 43, Issue 9, Pages 3183-3186

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/es8034889

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Mercury is a priority pollutant, as its mobility between the hydrosphere and the atmosphere threatens the biosphere globally. The air-water gas transfer of elemental mercury (Hg(0)) is controlled by its diffusion through the water-side boundary layer and thus by its diffusion coefficient, D(Hg), the value of which, however, has not been established. Here, the diffusion of Hg(0) in water was modeled by molecular dynamics (MD) simulation and the diffusion coefficient subsequently determined. Therefore the movement of either Hg(0) or xenon and 1000 model water molecules (TIP4P-Ew) were traced for time spans of 50 ns. The modeled D(xe) of the monatomic noble gas agreed well with measured data; thus, MD simulation was assumed to be a reliable approach to determine D(Hg) formonatomic Hg(0) as well. Accordingly, Hg(0) diffusion was then simulated for freshwater and seawater, and the data were well-described by the equation of Eyring. The activation energies for the diffusion of Hg(0) in freshwater was 17.0 kJ mol(-1) and in seawater 17.8 kJ mol(-1). The newly determined DHg is clearly lower than the one previously used for an oceanic mercury budget. Thus, its incorporation into the model should lead to lower estimates of global ocean mercury emissions.

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