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      Characteristics and Performances of a Nanostructured Material for Passive Samplers of Gaseous Hg

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          Abstract

          Passive air samplers (PASs) have been used for mapping gaseous mercury concentration in extensive areas. In this work, an easy-to-use and -prepare gold nanoparticle (NP)-based PAS has been investigated. The PAS is constituted of a microfibrous quartz disk filter impregnated of gold NP photo-growth on TiO 2 NPs (Au@TiO 2) and used as gaseous mercury adsorbing material. The disk was housed in a cylinder glass container and subjected to an axial diffusive sampling. The adsorbed mercury was measured by thermal desorption using a Tekran ® instrument. Different amounts of Au@TiO 2 (ranging between 4.0 and 4.0 × 10 −3 mg) were deposited by drop-casting onto the fibrous substrate and assessed for about 1 year of deployment in outdoor environment with a mercury concentration mean of about 1.24 ± 0.32 ng/m 3 in order to optimize the adsorbing layer. PASs showed a linear relation of the adsorbed mercury as a function of time with a rate of 18.5 ± 0.4 pg/day (≈1.5% of the gaseous concentration per day). However, only the PAS with 4 mg of Au@TiO 2, provided with a surface density of about 3.26 × 10 −2 mg/mm 2 and 50 μm thick inside the fibrous quartz, kept stability in working, with a constant sampling rate (SR) (0.0138 ± 0.0005 m 3/day) over an outdoor monitoring experimental campaign of about 1 year. On the other hand, higher sampling rates have been found when PASs were deployed for a few days, making these tools also effective for one-day monitoring. Furthermore, these PASs were used and re-used after each thermal desorption to confirm the chance to reuse such structured layers within their samplers, thus supporting the purpose to design inexpensive, compact and portable air pollutant sampling devices, ideal for assessing both personal and environmental exposures. During the whole deployment, PASs were aided by simultaneous Tekran ® measurements.

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          Most cited references65

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          Mercury as a Global Pollutant: Sources, Pathways, and Effects

          Mercury (Hg) is a global pollutant that affects human and ecosystem health. We synthesize understanding of sources, atmosphere-land-ocean Hg dynamics and health effects, and consider the implications of Hg-control policies. Primary anthropogenic Hg emissions greatly exceed natural geogenic sources, resulting in increases in Hg reservoirs and subsequent secondary Hg emissions that facilitate its global distribution. The ultimate fate of emitted Hg is primarily recalcitrant soil pools and deep ocean waters and sediments. Transfers of Hg emissions to largely unavailable reservoirs occur over the time scale of centuries, and are primarily mediated through atmospheric exchanges of wet/dry deposition and evasion from vegetation, soil organic matter and ocean surfaces. A key link between inorganic Hg inputs and exposure of humans and wildlife is the net production of methylmercury, which occurs mainly in reducing zones in freshwater, terrestrial, and coastal environments, and the subsurface ocean. Elevated human exposure to methylmercury primarily results from consumption of estuarine and marine fish. Developing fetuses are most at risk from this neurotoxin but health effects of highly exposed populations and wildlife are also a concern. Integration of Hg science with national and international policy efforts is needed to target efforts and evaluate efficacy.
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            Titania supported gold nanoparticles as photocatalyst.

            This Perspective is focused on the photocatalytic activity of gold nanoparticles supported on titania (Au/TiO(2)). Titania is the most widely used photocatalyst, but its limited activity under visible light irradiation has motivated the quest for modified titania materials absorbing visible light. The review starts by justifying how doping with metallic elements is a related strategy, but different, to that leading to the use of Au/TiO(2) in photocatalysis. Data supporting and confirming the photoactivity of gold nanoparticles in colloidal solutions are briefly presented to justify the possibility of gold photosensitization of titania by electron injection into the conduction band. After describing the most common procedures used to prepare Au/TiO(2), the central part of this article is focused on the photocatalytic activity reported for Au/TiO(2) for hydrogen generation, dye decoloration, phenol decomposition and carboxylic acid degradation, among other processes. Emphasis is given to the role that parameters like Au loading, particle size, surface area, spatial structuring and others play on the photocatalytic activity. One important issue has been to distinguish those reports using visible light from those other in which direct titania excitation by UV light has been used. These Au/TiO(2) photocatalysts can find real applications in the near future for environmental remediation and for hydrogen generation.
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              Dynamic oxidation of gaseous mercury in the Arctic troposphere at polar sunrise.

              Gaseous elemental mercury (Hg0) is a globally distributed air toxin with a long atmospheric residence time. Any process that reduces its atmospheric lifetime increases its potential accumulation in the biosphere. Our data from Barrow, AK, at 71 degrees N show that rapid, photochemically driven oxidation of boundary-layer Hg0 after polar sunrise, probably by reactive halogens, creates a rapidly depositing species of oxidized gaseous mercury in the remote Arctic troposphere at concentrations in excess of 900 pg m(-3). This mercury accumulates in the snowpack during polar spring at an accelerated rate in a form that is bioavailable to bacteria and is released with snowmelt during the summer emergence of the Arctic ecosystem. Evidence suggests that this is a recent phenomenon that may be occurring throughout the earth's polar regions.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Sensors (Basel)
                Sensors (Basel)
                sensors
                Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)
                MDPI
                1424-8220
                23 October 2020
                November 2020
                : 20
                : 21
                : 6021
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Institute of Atmospheric Pollution Research—National Research Council, Research Area of Rome 1, Via Salaria km 23,600, Monterotondo, 00016 Rome, Italy; joshua.avossa@ 123456empa.ch (J.A.); decesare@ 123456unitus.it (F.D.C.); p.papa@ 123456iia.cnr.it (P.P.); e.zampetti@ 123456iia.cnr.it (E.Z.); a.bearzotti@ 123456iia.cnr.it (A.B.)
                [2 ]Laboratory for Biomimetic Membranes and Textiles, Empa, Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology, Lerchenfeldstrasse 5, CH-9014 St. Gallen, Switzerland
                [3 ]Department of Innovation in Biological Systems, Food and Forestry (DIBAF), Via S. Camillo de Lellis, University of Tuscia, 00100 Viterbo, Italy
                [4 ]Institute of Chemical Sciences and Technologies “Giulio Natta” (SCITEC)—National Research Council, c/o Area di Ricerca di Milano 1, Sede Fantoli, Via Fantoli 16/15, 20138 Milano, Italy; marcello.marelli@ 123456scitec.cnr.it
                [5 ]Institute of Atmospheric Pollution Research—National Research Council, Division of Rende, UNICAL Polifuzionale, 87036 Rende, Italy; pirrone@ 123456iia.cnr.it
                Author notes
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9810-8746
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3794-3988
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4344-5547
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7513-6581
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3662-7326
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6015-4832
                Article
                sensors-20-06021
                10.3390/s20216021
                7660345
                33113994
                af3a942a-557a-4277-b599-c4343de3ca4e
                © 2020 by the authors.

                Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 21 September 2020
                : 21 October 2020
                Categories
                Article

                Biomedical engineering
                gaseous mercury pollution,au-tio2 nanoparticles,passive sampler,axial diffusion,thermal desorption,monitoring campaign

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