| Literature DB >> 24083104 |
Nahar Singh1, Tarushee Ahuja, Vijay Narain Ojha, Daya Soni, S Swarupa Tripathy, Ivo Leito.
Abstract
As a result of rapid industrialization several chemical forms of organic and inorganic mercury are constantly introduced to the environment and affect humans and animals directly. All forms of mercury have toxic effects; therefore accurate measurement of mercury is of prime importance especially in suspended particulate matter (SPM) collected through high volume sampler (HVS). In the quantification of mercury in SPM samples several steps are involved from sampling to final result. The quality, reliability and confidence level of the analyzed data depends upon the measurement uncertainty of the whole process. Evaluation of measurement uncertainty of results is one of the requirements of the standard ISO/IEC 17025:2005 (European Standard EN IS/ISO/IEC 17025:2005, issue1:1-28, 2006). In the presented study the uncertainty estimation in mercury determination in suspended particulate matter (SPM) has been carried out using cold vapor Atomic Absorption Spectrometer-Hydride Generator (AAS-HG) technique followed by wet chemical digestion process. For the calculation of uncertainty, we have considered many general potential sources of uncertainty. After the analysis of data of seven diverse sites of Delhi, it has been concluded that the mercury concentration varies from 1.59 ± 0.37 to 14.5 ± 2.9 ng/m(3) with 95% confidence level (k = 2).Entities:
Keywords: Atomic absorption spectrometer-hydride generator; High volume sampler; Mercury; Uncertainty evaluation
Year: 2013 PMID: 24083104 PMCID: PMC3786082 DOI: 10.1186/2193-1801-2-453
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Various evaluated components for the determination of mercury in SPM samples
| Sample I.D. | SPM (μg/m3) | Concentration of mercury obtained from AAS-HG after reducing blank (μg/litre) [CHg] | Volume made for test samples (mL) [ | Total weight of SPM deposited on 18 cm × 23 cm filter paper (g) [ | Weight of SPM deposited on 18 cm × 11.5 cm filter paper area taken for analysis (g) [ | Volume of air processed through HVS at STP, (m3) [ | Recovery of the analytical procedure (%) [ | **Concentration of mercury in ng/m3C(MHg) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| S-1 | 395 | 58.22 (2.82)* | 50 | 0.17744 | 0.08872 | 493.52 | 94.39 | 12.55 ± 2.44 |
| S-2 | 203 | 23.41 (2.13)* | 50 | 0.09124 | 0.04562 | 414.97 | 6.00 ± 1.23 | |
| S-3 | 2337 | 62.32 (4.13)* | 50 | 1.05086 | 0.52543 | 457.16 | 14.50 ± 2.87 | |
| S-4 | 251 | 6.83 (1.12)* | 50 | 0.11279 | 0.05639 | 456.66 | 1.59 ± 0.37 | |
| S-5 | 338 | 14.04 (0.92)* | 50 | 0.15214 | 0.07607 | 471.24 | 3.17 ± 0.63 | |
| S-6 | 429 | 23.11 (1.62)* | 50 | 0.19300 | 0.09650 | 417.58 | 5.89 ± 1.17 | |
| S-7 | 347 | 16.6 (1.33)* | 50 | 0.62306 | 0.31153 | 391.63 | 4.51 ± 0.91 |
*Value in parentheses is the standard deviation of six determinations of two replicates (three each).
**Concentration of metal mercury has been calculated by using eq.-1 and values reported with expanded uncertainty in ng/m3.
Figure 1Fish bone diagram for potential sources of uncertainty in mercury measurement by HG-AAS.
Uncertainty due to high volume sampler () for measuring volume of air at STP
| Name of the site | Date of sampling | Sampling starting time | Sampling end time | Flow rate of air sampled through HVS (m3/min) | Time (in min.) | Volume of air processed through HVS (m3) V1 | Atmospheric pressure measured on site (mbar) | Atmospheric pressure in mm of mercury (mbar × 0.75) P1 | Average temperature of the sampling site (°C) | Average temperature of the sampling site (K) T1 | Volume of air processed through HVS at STP (m3) [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 31-1-08 | 9.10 am | 5.30 pm | 1.1 | 500 | 550 | 994.2 | 745.65 | 25.5 | 298.5 | 493.52 | |
| 1-2-08 | 10.0 am | 5.00 pm | 1.1 | 420 | 462 | 995.2 | 746.40 | 25.5 | 298.5 | 414.97 | |
| 2-2-08 | 9.45 am | 5.30 pm | 1.1 | 465 | 511.5 | 993.6 | 745.20 | 26.5 | 299.5 | 457.16 | |
| 3-2-08 | 9.45 am | 5.30 pm | 1.1 | 465 | 511.5 | 992.5 | 744.37 | 26.5 | 299.5 | 456.66 | |
| 4-2-08 | 10.30 am | 6.30 pm | 1.1 | 480 | 528 | 995.5 | 746.63 | 27.5 | 300.5 | 471.24 | |
| 5-2-08 | 9.15 am | 6.00 pm | 1.1 | 425 | 467.5 | 996.3 | 747.22 | 27.5 | 300.5 | 417.58 | |
| 6-2-08 | 10.0 am | 4.40 pm | 1.1 | 400 | 440 | 992.8 | 744.60 | 27.5 | 300.5 | 391.63 |
*[V] is calculated using equation -7, following section uncertainty evaluation due to volume of air processed through high Volume sampler in section- 8.
Uncertainty components (summary table) for calculation of combined uncertainty
| S.N. | u(C | u(V | u(W | u(W | u(V | u(R)/R |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| S-1 | 1.30/ 58.22 | 0.021/50 | 0.00024/ 0.17744 | 0.00024/ 0.08872 | 46.54/ 493.52 | 0.80/ 94.39 |
| S-2 | 0.90/ 23.41 | 0.021/50 | 0.00024/ 0.09124 | 0.00024/ 0.04562 | 39.13/ 414.97 | 0.80/ 94.39 |
| S-3 | 1.80/ 62.32 | 0.021/50 | 0.00024/ 1.05086 | 0.00024/ 0.52543 | 43.11/ 457.16 | 0.80/ 94.39 |
| S-4 | 0.46/ 6.83 | 0.021/50 | 0.00024/ 0.11279 | 0.00024/ 0.05639 | 43.06/ 456.66 | 0.80/ 94.39 |
| S-5 | 0.40/ 14.04 | 0.021/50 | 0.00024/ 0.15214 | 0.00024/ 0.07607 | 44.44/ 471.24 | 0.80/ 94.39 |
| S-6 | 0.70/ 23.11 | 0.021/50 | 0.00024/ 0.19300 | 0.00024/ 0.09650 | 39.38/ 417.58 | 0.80/ 94.39 |
| S-7 | 0.57/ 16.6 | 0.021/50 | 0.00024/ 0.62306 | 0.00024/ 0.31153 | 36.93/ 391.63 | 0.80/ 94.39 |
Results of mercury with uncertainty in SPM analyzed by AAS-HG
| Name of the site | SPM in μg/m3 | Concentration of mercury in ng/m3with expanded uncertainty at 95% confidence; k = 2 |
|---|---|---|
| Heavy traffic site (S-1); Ashram zone | 395 | 12.6 ± 2.4 |
| Industrial site (S-2) ; Azadpur zone | 203 | 6.0 ± 1.2 |
| Densely populated + Traffic site (S-3); Loni Road | 2,337 | 14.5 ± 2.9 |
| Ambient site (S-4) ; Pitampura zone | 251 | 1.59 ± 0.37 |
| Traffic site (S-5); Highway No.56 | 338 | 3.17 ± 0.63 |
| Industrial site (S-6) ; Nariana zone | 429 | 5.9 ± 1.2 |
| Mix Zone (S-7); NPL zone | 347 | 4.51 ± 0.91 |
Figure 2Concentration of each sample with associated uncertainty value.
Figure 3Contribution of each uncertainty source.