<<A>> modelling study of atmospheric cycle of mercury and its exchange processes at environmental interfaces
Mostra/ Apri
Creato da
De Simone, Francesco
Bertolini, Roberto
Carbone, Vincenzo
Pirrone, Nicola
HedgecocK, Ian M.
Metadata
Mostra tutti i dati dell'itemDescrizione
Formato
/
Scuola di Dottorato Scienza e Tecnica "Bernardino Telesio", Fisica dei Sistemi Complessi, XXVIII Ciclo, a.a. 2015-2016; Since ancient times human activities have significantly altered the natural global
Mercury (Hg) cycle through emissions to the environment. Hg is a global pollutant
since its predominant atmospheric form, elemental Hg, reacts relatively slowly
with the more abundant atmospheric oxidants and is therefore transported long
distances from its emission source. Once oxidised however Hg is readily deposited,
an can then be converted to the toxic monomethylmercury (MeHg) in soils and
natural waters. MeHg is able to bioaccumulate and biomagnify, up to levels at
which it is harmful to human health. Mercury pollution is therefore a threat to
ecosystem health on a global scale, and is now being addressed by an international
agreement, the Minamata Convention. Comprehensive knowledge of the details
of the atmospheric Hg cycle is still lacking, and in particular there is some uncertainty
regarding the atmospherically relevant reduction-oxidation reactions of
mercury and its compounds. The exchange of Hg and its compounds between the
atmosphere and the oceans also plays an important role in the cycling of mercury
in the environment: understanding and quantifying mercury deposition patterns
and fluxes is critically important for the assessment of the present, and future, environmental
impact of mercury contamination. ECHMERIT is a global on-line
chemical transport model, based on the ECHAM5 global circulation model, with
a highly customisable chemistry mechanism designed to facilitate the investigation of both aqueous and gas phase atmospheric mercury chemistry. An improved
version of the model which includes a new set of emissions routines, both on-line
and off-line, has been developed and used for this thesis to investigate and assess
a number of the uncertainties related to the Hg atmospheric cycle. Outputs of
multi-year model simulations have been used to validate the model and to estimate
emissions from oceans. Various redox mechanisms have been included to
assess how chemical reactions influence the models ability to reproduce measured
Hg concentrations and deposition flux patterns. To characterize the Hg emissions
which result from Biomass Burning , three recent biomass burning inventories
(FINNv1.0, GFEDv3.1 and GFASv1.0) were included in the model and used to
investigate the annual variation of Hg. The differences in the geographical distribution
and magnitude of the resulting Hg deposition fluxes, hence the uncertainty
associated with this Hg source, were quantified. The roles of the Hg/CO enhancement ratio, the emission plume injection height, the Hg0
(g) oxidation mechanism
and lifetime, and the inventory chosen, as well as their uncertainty were considered.
The greatest uncertainties in the total deposition of Hg due to fires were
found to be associated with the Hg/CO enhancement ratio and the emission inventory
employed. Deposition flux distributions proved to be more sensitive to
the emission inventory and the oxidation mechanism chosen, than all the other
model parameters. Over 75% of Hg emitted from biomass burning is deposited to
the world’s oceans, with the highest fluxes predicted in the North Atlantic and the
highest total deposition in the North Pacific. The net effect of biomass burning is
to liberate Hg from lower latitudes and disperse it towards higher latitudes where it is eventually deposited. Finally, the model was used to evaluate the fate of the Hg
released into the atmosphere by human activities. Anthropogenic emissions are
estimated to amount to roughly 2000Mg/y (1000-4000 Mg/y). Hg speciation (elemental,
oxidised or associated with particulate matter) is subject to many uncertainties:
the extremely variable lifetimes among Hg species, as well as the Hg emission
heights, in combination with the complex physical and chemical mechanisms
that drive its final fall-out lead to considerable uncertainties. To address this specific
issue three anthropogenic Hg emission inventories, namely AMAP-UNEP,
EDGAR and Streets, were included in the Model. Different model parametrisations
were adopted to trace the fate of Hg to its final receptors and to thoroughly
test the model performance against the measurements. Primary anthropogenic
Hg contributes up to 40% of the present day Hg deposition. The oxidation mechanism
has a significant impact on the geographical distribution of the deposition
of Hg emitted from human activities globally, : 63% is deposited to the world’s
oceans. The results presented in this thesis provide a new and unique picture of
the global cycle of mercury, evaluating and assessing the uncertainties related to
many aspects with an on-line Global Circulation Model developed specifically to
investigate the global atmospheric Hg cycle.; Università della CalabriaSoggetto
Pollution; Mercury
Relazione
FIS/06;