The Scientific World Journal (Jan 2014)

Gaseous Oxidized Mercury Dry Deposition Measurements in the Southwestern USA: A Comparison between Texas, Eastern Oklahoma, and the Four Corners Area

  • Mark E. Sather,
  • Shaibal Mukerjee,
  • Kara L. Allen,
  • Luther Smith,
  • Johnson Mathew,
  • Clarence Jackson,
  • Ryan Callison,
  • Larry Scrapper,
  • April Hathcoat,
  • Jacque Adam,
  • Danielle Keese,
  • Philip Ketcher,
  • Robert Brunette,
  • Jason Karlstrom,
  • Gerard Van der Jagt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2014/580723
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2014

Abstract

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Gaseous oxidized mercury (GOM) dry deposition measurements using aerodynamic surrogate surface passive samplers were collected in central and eastern Texas and eastern Oklahoma, from September 2011 to September 2012. The purpose of this study was to provide an initial characterization of the magnitude and spatial extent of ambient GOM dry deposition in central and eastern Texas for a 12-month period which contained statistically average annual results for precipitation totals, temperature, and wind speed. The research objective was to investigate GOM dry deposition in areas of Texas impacted by emissions from coal-fired utility boilers and compare it with GOM dry deposition measurements previously observed in eastern Oklahoma and the Four Corners area. Annual GOM dry deposition rate estimates were relatively low in Texas, ranging from 0.1 to 0.3 ng/m2h at the four Texas monitoring sites, similar to the 0.2 ng/m2h annual GOM dry deposition rate estimate recorded at the eastern Oklahoma monitoring site. The Texas and eastern Oklahoma annual GOM dry deposition rate estimates were at least four times lower than the highest annual GOM dry deposition rate estimate previously measured in the more arid bordering western states of New Mexico and Colorado in the Four Corners area.