Title

Airborne Emissions Of Mercury From Municipal Solid Waste. Ii: Potential Losses Of Airborne Mercury Before Landfill

Abstract

Waste distribution and compaction at the working face of municipal waste landfills releases mercury vapor (Hg0) to the atmosphere, as does the flaring of landfill gas. Waste storage and processing before its addition to the landfill also has the potential to release Hg0 to the air if it is initially present or formed by chemical reduction of HgII to Hg0 within collected waste. We measured the release of Hg vapor to the atmosphere during dumpster and transfer station activities and waste storage before landfilling at a municipal landfill operation in central Florida. We also quantified the potential contribution of specific Hg-bearing wastes, including mercury (Hg) thermometers and fluorescent bulbs, and searched for primary Hg sources in sorted wastes at three different landfills. Surprisingly large fluxes were estimated for Hg losses at transfer facilities (∼100 mg/hr) and from dumpsters in the field (∼30 mg/hr for 1,000 dumpsters), suggesting that Hg emissions occurring before landfilling may constitute a significant fraction of the total emission from the disposal/landfill cycle and a need for more measurements on these sources. Reducing conditions of landfill burial were obviously not needed to generate strong Hg0 signals, indicating that much of the Hg was already present in a metallic (Hg0) form. Attempts to identify specific Hg sources in excavated and sorted waste indicated few readily identifiable sources; because of effective mixing and diffusion of Hg0, the entire waste mass acts as a source. Broken fluorescent bulbs and thermometers in dumpsters emitted Hg0 at 10 to >100 μg/hr and continued to act as near constant sources for several days. © 2006 Air & Waste Management Association.

Publication Date

1-1-2005

Publication Title

Journal of the Air and Waste Management Association

Volume

55

Issue

7

Number of Pages

870-877

Document Type

Article

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.1080/10473289.2005.10464695

Socpus ID

24344441589 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/24344441589

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