Mercury speciation in Galveston Bay, Texas: the importance of complexation by natural organic ligands

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Mercury speciation in Galveston Bay, Texas: the importance of complexation by natural organic ligands
المؤلفون: Han, Seunghee
المساهمون: Gill, Gary A., Cifuentes, Luis A., Lindahl, Paul A., Santschi, Peter H.
بيانات النشر: Texas A&M University
سنة النشر: 2005
المجموعة: Texas A&M University Digital Repository
مصطلحات موضوعية: mercury, organic, estuary, speciation
الوصف: The major goal of this research is the development of a competitive ligand equilibration-solvent solvent extraction (CLE-SSE) method to determine organically complexed mercury species in estuarine water. The method was applied to estuarine surface waters of Galveston Bay and the water column of Offatts Bayou. Thermodynamic equilibrium modeling estimated organically complexed mercury species in estuarine water using the conditional stability constants of mercury-organic complexes and the concentrations of organic ligands determined by CLE-SSE. Two competing ligands, chloride and thiosalicylic acid (TSA), were used for CLE-SSE. Chloride ion competition determined conditional stability constants for 1 : 1 mercury-ligand complexes ranging from ~1023 to ~1024 with concentrations of organic ligands at low nM levels. TSA competition determined stronger mercury-binding ligands by manipulating the TSA concentration such that a higher binding strength was achieved than that for the mercury-chloride complex. TSA competition determined conditional stability constants for 1 : 1 mercury-ligand complexes ranging from ~1027 to ~1029, with ligand concentrations ranging from 10 to 100 pM. Mercury-organic binding strengths in these ranges are consistent with bidentate mercury complexation by low molecular weight organic thiols. A linear relationship was observed between log stability constants for the mercury-ligand complex and log ligand concentrations, supporting the hypothesis that there is a continuum of mercury binding site strengths associated with dissolved organic matter. In Galveston Bay, organically complexed mercury accounted for > 95 % of the total dissolved mercury in surface water. Organic complexation of mercury coupled with mercury dissolution from particulate phases controls the filter-passing mercury distribution in surface waters of Galveston Bay. The estuarine distributional features of mercury-complexing organic ligands were similar to those of glutathione, supporting mercury complexation by a thiol binding ...
نوع الوثيقة: book
doctoral or postdoctoral thesis
وصف الملف: 648173 bytes; electronic; application/pdf; born digital
اللغة: English
العلاقة: https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/1539Test
الإتاحة: https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/1539Test
رقم الانضمام: edsbas.F0B92834
قاعدة البيانات: BASE