Home

Proceedings of the International Academy of Ecology and Environmental Sciences, 2012, 2(3): 139-149
[XML] [EndNote Tagged] [BibTex] [ Full PDF (169K)] [Comment Article]

Article

Detection of mercury and other metals in mercury contaminated soils using mid-infrared spectroscopy

Sharon R. Jean-Philippe 1, Nicole Labbe 1, Jennifer A. Franklin 1, Amy Johnson 2
1Department of Forestry, Wildlife and Fisheries, University of Tennessee, USA
2Department of Biosystems Engineering and Soil Science, University of Tennessee, USA

Received 7 December 2011;Accepted 12 January 2012;Published online 1 September 2012
IAEES

Abstract
The Oak Ridge Reservation, established in 1942, was the designated site for the construction of the atomic bomb. During a 20-year period from 1944-1963 radioactive and toxic chemical pollutants, especially mercury compounds were released into the surrounding waterways. Mercury in the soil environment can undergo numerous chemical transformations. Conventional methods for detection of total soil mercury in contaminated environments are based on time-consuming sample preparation and costly sample analysis. The possibility for determination of total soil -Hg concentration and other elements in contaminated soils using the mid-infrared (MIR) region (4000 - 600 cm-1) has been investigated. Principal component analysis (PCA) was used to identify patterns or differences in soil spectral data and partial least squares (PLS) regression was used to develop models for several metals in soil samples. Pearson correlation identified nine elements (Sr, Ni, Cu, Cd, V, Ti, Fe, Ba, Rb) and total carbon that were significantly correlated with total soil-Hg. Our calibration models showed high r for Hg, and Sr (r>.90) and relatively moderate r for Cu and Ni (r>.80). Results support the conclusion that mid-infrared spectroscopy could aid conventional method analyses of soils heavily contaminated with certain heavy metals after a robust model is developed.

Keywords heavy metals;mercury;soil;spectroscopy.



International Academy of Ecology and Environmental Sciences. E-mail: office@iaees.org
Copyright © 2009-2024 International Academy of Ecology and Environmental Sciences. All rights reserved.
Web administrator: office@iaees.org, website@iaees.org; Last modified: 2024/4/27


Translate page to: