17 resultados para Mercury intrusion porosimetry


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The focus of this research is to determine if a relationship exists between the stability constant and the initial uptake rate of a mercury species by bacteria. Cultures of the sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) strain Desulfovibrio desulfuricans G20 were washed with a bicarbonate buffer solution containing either lactate and sulfate or pyruvate and fumarate. The washed cell solutions were then spiked with either mercury bound to natural organic matter (Hg-NOM) or neutral mercury chloride (HgCl2), followed by sampling over time to provide kinetic data. Despite the significantly different stability constants for Hg-NOM and HgCl2, the calculated initial rate constants for mercury uptake for these two types of complexes appeared to be comparable. Uptake of mercury sulfide species was inconclusive due to possible formation of cinnabar. A simple model that is based on assumptions of passive diffusion and facilitated uptake of mercury by bacteria was evaluated for its potential to simulate the uptake. The model results only agreed with experimental data for HgCl2 uptake.

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This research is part of continued efforts to correlate the hydrology of East Fork Poplar Creek (EFPC) and Bear Creek (BC) with the long term distribution of mercury within the overland, subsurface, and river sub-domains. The main objective of this study was to add a sedimentation module (ECO Lab) capable of simulating the reactive transport mercury exchange mechanisms within sediments and porewater throughout the watershed. The enhanced model was then applied to a Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) mercury analysis for EFPC. That application used historical precipitation, groundwater levels, river discharges, and mercury concentrations data that were retrieved from government databases and input to the model. The model was executed to reduce computational time, predict flow discharges, total mercury concentration, flow duration and mercury mass rate curves at key monitoring stations under various hydrological and environmental conditions and scenarios. The computational results provided insight on the relationship between discharges and mercury mass rate curves at various stations throughout EFPC, which is important to best understand and support the management mercury contamination and remediation efforts within EFPC.