1. Seasonal and Diurnal Variation of Air/Water Exchange of Gaseous Mercury in a Southern Reservoir Lake (Cane Creek Lake, Tennessee, USA)
- Author
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Hong Zhang and William C. Crocker
- Subjects
lcsh:Hydraulic engineering ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,chemistry.chemical_element ,010501 environmental sciences ,Aquatic Science ,Atmospheric sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Wind speed ,lcsh:Water supply for domestic and industrial purposes ,emission/evasion ,lcsh:TC1-978 ,Relative humidity ,Cane ,freshwater ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Water Science and Technology ,Morning ,fish ,lcsh:TD201-500 ,Gaseous mercury ,photochemistry ,biology ,global biogeochemical cycle ,Diurnal temperature variation ,heavy metal ,biology.organism_classification ,Mercury (element) ,dynamic flux chamber ,chemistry ,Air water ,Environmental science - Abstract
A year-long field study of mercury (Hg) air/water exchange was conducted at a southern reservoir lake, Cane Creek Lake (Cookeville, TN, USA). The Hg air/water exchange fluxes and meteorological data including solar radiation (global solar radiation, Rg and ultraviolent radiation, UVA), water and air temperatures, relative humidity, and wind speed were collected to study the daily and seasonal trends of the Hg air/water exchange at the lake in relation to solar radiation and wind speed. The Hg exchange fluxes generally exhibited diurnal patterns with a rise in the morning, a peak around noontime, and a fall in the afternoon through the evening, closely following the change of solar radiation. There were cases that deviated from this general daily trend. The Hg emission fluxes were all below 3 ng m&minus, 2 h&minus, 1 with the daily mean fluxes <, 2 ng m&minus, 1. The fluxes in the summer (mean: 1.2 ng m&minus, 1) were higher than in the fall (mean: 0.6 ng m&minus, 1) and winter (mean: 0.7 ng m&minus, 1). The daily and seasonal trends of the Hg air/water exchange fluxes are similar to the trends of the changes of the dissolved gaseous mercury (DGM) concentrations in the lake observed in our previous study. Solar radiation was found to exert a primary control over the Hg air/water exchange, while wind speed appeared to have a secondary effect on the Hg exchange. The two-thin-film model was used to calculate Hg emission fluxes from the Cane Creek Lake water.
- Published
- 2020
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