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Speciated mercury emissions from laboratory combustion of wildland fuel. D. Obrist, H. Moosm üller, Desert Research Institute, Reno, NV C. Wold, E.N. Lincoln, P. Freeborn, and W.-M. Hao, USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory, Missoula, MT
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Speciated mercury emissions from laboratory combustion of wildland fuel D. Obrist, H. Moosmüller, Desert Research Institute, Reno, NV C. Wold, E.N. Lincoln, P. Freeborn, and W.-M. Hao, USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory, Missoula, MT S. Kreidenweis, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO • Importance: • Atmospheric Hg deposition is the major source of Hg contamination in remote systems • Hg emissions from wildfires globally an important source to atmospheric Hg load (>500 tons/year) • Speciation of emissions unlcear: if Hg-0 (elemental gasous form): emissions likely enter global atmospheric Hg pool • if Hg-P (particulate-phase form): emissions likely deposit locally Methods: • Mercury analyses • Hg-0: Tekran 2537 gaseous mercury analyzer; 1.5 l min-1; 0.2m Teflon filters; acid-cleaned teflon filters and lines • Hg-P: Pre-heated quartz-fiber filters; 50 l min-1; Analysis (Frontier Geosciences: BrCl digestion; SnCl2 reduction; dual amalgamation; CVAFS detection) USFS Fire Science Lab: Biomass Combustion and Smoke Stack Sampling Results: Percentage Hg-P of total Hg emission as a function of: (c) Fuel Moisture (B) Fuel Type (A) Combustion Phase Conclusions ●Speciation between Hg-0 and Hg-P emissions from biomass combustion largely determined by fuel moisture ● Green, fresh biomass combustion results in high Hg-P contributions (up to 40% of total Hg emissions) ● Wildfires may contribute significantly to local Hg deposition when green leaves and branches are burned Funding of this study was provided by the NSF Atmospheric Chemistry program (ATM-0632780 ) and by the Joint Fire Science Program Acknowledgement