Mercury fractionation in gypsum using temperature desorption and mass spectrometric detection

A quadrupole mass spectrometer was used to study the thermal release of mercury from wet flue gas desulphurization (WFGD) gypsum using temperature-programmed desorption/decomposition (TPD). The inability in direct detection of low concentrations of mercury halogenides in gypsum by mass spectrometry...

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Main Authors: Pavlin Majda, Popović Arkadij, Jaćimović Radojko, Horvat Milena
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2018-06-01
Series:Open Chemistry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/chem-2018-0046
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spelling doaj-33de5a2e085646c7a077f57789fd517c2021-09-06T19:19:34ZengDe GruyterOpen Chemistry2391-54202018-06-0116154455510.1515/chem-2018-0046chem-2018-0046Mercury fractionation in gypsum using temperature desorption and mass spectrometric detectionPavlin Majda0Popović Arkadij1Jaćimović Radojko2Horvat Milena3Department of Environmental Sciences, Jožef Stefan Institute, Jamova cesta 39, 1000Ljubljana, SloveniaDepartment of Environmental Sciences, Jožef Stefan Institute, Jamova cesta 39, 1000Ljubljana, SloveniaDepartment of Environmental Sciences, Jožef Stefan Institute, Jamova cesta 39, 1000Ljubljana, SloveniaDepartment of Environmental Sciences, Jožef Stefan Institute, Jamova cesta 39, 1000Ljubljana, SloveniaA quadrupole mass spectrometer was used to study the thermal release of mercury from wet flue gas desulphurization (WFGD) gypsum using temperature-programmed desorption/decomposition (TPD). The inability in direct detection of low concentrations of mercury halogenides in gypsum by mass spectrometry is discussed in detail. The hydrolysis of HgCl2 vapours under specific experimental conditions in the mass spectrometer was considered theoretically and proved experimentally. The mercury concentration in different gypsum fractions varies from 0.22 mg kg-1 (3.27-148 μm, coarse particles) to 20.6 mg kg-1 (0.41-88.0 μm, fine particles). All samples had a similar, symmetrical, single-peak (peak maximum 253–266°C) in the TPD spectra. In the present study, the use of ‘wet’ methods for preparing mercury compounds is introduced in addition to the mercury standards prepared using the ‘dry’ method, as commonly found in TPD. The study showed that selected metals, such as Fe enriched in gypsum samples, significantly influence the shape and the maximum temperature of the Hg TPD curves and that during the mercury compound preparation and the TPD process, Hg species undergo transformations that prevent the identification of their original identity.https://doi.org/10.1515/chem-2018-0046mass spectrometrymercurytemperature-programmed desorptionwfgd gypsumparticle size fractions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pavlin Majda
Popović Arkadij
Jaćimović Radojko
Horvat Milena
spellingShingle Pavlin Majda
Popović Arkadij
Jaćimović Radojko
Horvat Milena
Mercury fractionation in gypsum using temperature desorption and mass spectrometric detection
Open Chemistry
mass spectrometry
mercury
temperature-programmed desorption
wfgd gypsum
particle size fractions
author_facet Pavlin Majda
Popović Arkadij
Jaćimović Radojko
Horvat Milena
author_sort Pavlin Majda
title Mercury fractionation in gypsum using temperature desorption and mass spectrometric detection
title_short Mercury fractionation in gypsum using temperature desorption and mass spectrometric detection
title_full Mercury fractionation in gypsum using temperature desorption and mass spectrometric detection
title_fullStr Mercury fractionation in gypsum using temperature desorption and mass spectrometric detection
title_full_unstemmed Mercury fractionation in gypsum using temperature desorption and mass spectrometric detection
title_sort mercury fractionation in gypsum using temperature desorption and mass spectrometric detection
publisher De Gruyter
series Open Chemistry
issn 2391-5420
publishDate 2018-06-01
description A quadrupole mass spectrometer was used to study the thermal release of mercury from wet flue gas desulphurization (WFGD) gypsum using temperature-programmed desorption/decomposition (TPD). The inability in direct detection of low concentrations of mercury halogenides in gypsum by mass spectrometry is discussed in detail. The hydrolysis of HgCl2 vapours under specific experimental conditions in the mass spectrometer was considered theoretically and proved experimentally. The mercury concentration in different gypsum fractions varies from 0.22 mg kg-1 (3.27-148 μm, coarse particles) to 20.6 mg kg-1 (0.41-88.0 μm, fine particles). All samples had a similar, symmetrical, single-peak (peak maximum 253–266°C) in the TPD spectra. In the present study, the use of ‘wet’ methods for preparing mercury compounds is introduced in addition to the mercury standards prepared using the ‘dry’ method, as commonly found in TPD. The study showed that selected metals, such as Fe enriched in gypsum samples, significantly influence the shape and the maximum temperature of the Hg TPD curves and that during the mercury compound preparation and the TPD process, Hg species undergo transformations that prevent the identification of their original identity.
topic mass spectrometry
mercury
temperature-programmed desorption
wfgd gypsum
particle size fractions
url https://doi.org/10.1515/chem-2018-0046
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AT popovicarkadij mercuryfractionationingypsumusingtemperaturedesorptionandmassspectrometricdetection
AT jacimovicradojko mercuryfractionationingypsumusingtemperaturedesorptionandmassspectrometricdetection
AT horvatmilena mercuryfractionationingypsumusingtemperaturedesorptionandmassspectrometricdetection
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