Fate of mercury in a terrestial biological lab process using and .

Int J Phytoremediation

UNAM, Facultad de Química, DIQ, Edif. E-3, Laboratorios 301-302-303 , Paseo de la Investigación científica s/n. Mexico City , Mexico.

Published: October 2019

Mercury has been extracted in Queretaro, Mexico since the 1960s. The mining wastes were open-air disposal and these mercury wastes have polluted the zone. The aim of this research was to evaluate mercury's fate in lab scale terrestrial reactors considering the following mercury species: soluble, interchangeable, strongly bound, organic, and residual ones. Soils were sampled in two former mines of Pinal de Amoles, Queretaro, Mexico (N 20° 58' to 21° 21' and West 99° 26' to 99° 43') with initial mercury concentrations were 424 ± 29 and 433 ± 12 mg kg for "La Lorena" and "San Jose" former mines, respectively. Two vegetal species and were used and 20 reactors were constructed for the lab process. Total mercury was removed to 49-79% from both soils. Mercury elemental, exchangeable, and organic species had the most removal or exchange in the process. Metal uptake, by the plants, was of 5-6% for . and 5-15% for . . Also, mercury fate was estimated to the atmosphere to be 3.3-4.5 mg m h for both soils.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15226514.2019.1612842DOI Listing

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