Mass-independent Fractionation of Mercury Isotopes in Freshwater Systems

Mass-independent fractionation (MIF) of Hg isotopes has the potential to track the environmental transport and fate of Hg. Herein we demonstrate that reducing both the frequency and intensity of light have a large effect on the expression and magnitude of MIF. This strongly supports the magnetic is...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rose, Carla
Other Authors: Bridget, Bergquist
Language:en_ca
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/25907
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-259072013-04-20T05:21:42ZMass-independent Fractionation of Mercury Isotopes in Freshwater SystemsRose, Carlamercury isotopesmethylmercury0996Mass-independent fractionation (MIF) of Hg isotopes has the potential to track the environmental transport and fate of Hg. Herein we demonstrate that reducing both the frequency and intensity of light have a large effect on the expression and magnitude of MIF. This strongly supports the magnetic isotope effect as the mechanism behind MIF observed during aqueous photo-reduction of Hg(II) and MeHg. The ratios of MIF, KapDelta199Hg/KapDelta201Hg, were 1.00 ± 0.04 (2SE) for Hg(II) and 1.35 ± 0.16 (2SE) for MeHg respectively and did not change as incident radiation energy and magnitude of MIF diminished, suggesting the respective MIF pathways remained constant regardless of experimental conditions. Comparable amounts of total photo-reduction were shown to coincide with different magnitudes of MIF depending the wavelength light available for photo-reduction. This confirms there are multiple pathways for photo-reduction in freshwater reservoirs and indicates that quantitatively relating photo-reduction and MIF will be challenging.Bridget, Bergquist2010-112011-01-13T20:27:42ZNO_RESTRICTION2011-01-13T20:27:42Z2011-01-13T20:27:42ZThesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/25907en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic mercury isotopes
methylmercury
0996
spellingShingle mercury isotopes
methylmercury
0996
Rose, Carla
Mass-independent Fractionation of Mercury Isotopes in Freshwater Systems
description Mass-independent fractionation (MIF) of Hg isotopes has the potential to track the environmental transport and fate of Hg. Herein we demonstrate that reducing both the frequency and intensity of light have a large effect on the expression and magnitude of MIF. This strongly supports the magnetic isotope effect as the mechanism behind MIF observed during aqueous photo-reduction of Hg(II) and MeHg. The ratios of MIF, KapDelta199Hg/KapDelta201Hg, were 1.00 ± 0.04 (2SE) for Hg(II) and 1.35 ± 0.16 (2SE) for MeHg respectively and did not change as incident radiation energy and magnitude of MIF diminished, suggesting the respective MIF pathways remained constant regardless of experimental conditions. Comparable amounts of total photo-reduction were shown to coincide with different magnitudes of MIF depending the wavelength light available for photo-reduction. This confirms there are multiple pathways for photo-reduction in freshwater reservoirs and indicates that quantitatively relating photo-reduction and MIF will be challenging.
author2 Bridget, Bergquist
author_facet Bridget, Bergquist
Rose, Carla
author Rose, Carla
author_sort Rose, Carla
title Mass-independent Fractionation of Mercury Isotopes in Freshwater Systems
title_short Mass-independent Fractionation of Mercury Isotopes in Freshwater Systems
title_full Mass-independent Fractionation of Mercury Isotopes in Freshwater Systems
title_fullStr Mass-independent Fractionation of Mercury Isotopes in Freshwater Systems
title_full_unstemmed Mass-independent Fractionation of Mercury Isotopes in Freshwater Systems
title_sort mass-independent fractionation of mercury isotopes in freshwater systems
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/25907
work_keys_str_mv AT rosecarla massindependentfractionationofmercuryisotopesinfreshwatersystems
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