Is Your Water Safe?

Physical Chemists Devise Quick Spectrometry-Based Mercury Test

August 1, 2006

Physical chemists have created a new, cheap test to detect mercury, an element known to harm the brain, kidneys, heart, lungs and immune system. A gold nanorod absorbs mercury from a sample and, then and an optical spectrometer measures changes in the nanorod's light absorption. The process, which takes less than 10 minutes, can test mercury concentrations in liquids, gases, or solids.

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Science behind the news is funded by a generous grant from the NSF

BACKGROUND: Chemists are using an unusual technique to detect mercury in your water: gold nanorods, two thousand times thinner than a human hair The gold absorbs the mercury while the researchers monitor changes in the amount of light through a hand-held device called an optical spectrometer. This process can be used to create water filters and reclaim contaminated water.

HOW MERCURY GETS INTO WATER: Mercury is found in many rocks including coal, which when burned, releases mercury into the environment. Coal-burning power plants are the largest human-caused source of mercury emissions to the air in the United States, accounting for over 40 percent of all domestic human-caused mercury emissions. The EPA has estimated that about one quarter of U.S. emissions from coal-burning power plants are deposited within the U.S. Burning hazardous wastes, producing chlorine, breaking mercury products, and spilling mercury, as well as the improper treatment and disposal of products or wastes containing mercury, can also release it into the environment. Current estimates are that less than half of all mercury within the U.S. comes from U.S. sources. Mercury in the air eventually settles into water or onto land where it can be washed into water.

TOXIC MERCURY: Also known as "quicksilver," mercury is heavy, silver-like metal, and one of five elements that are liquid at or near room temperature. Mercury is a neurotoxin, so it affects the central nervous system, causing personality changes, nervousness, trembling and in extreme cases, dementia. If mercury vapor is inhaled, as much as 80 percent of it may enter the bloodstream.

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Did you know?...

The term "mad as a hatter" comes from the 19th century, because hat makers often suffered from severe mercury poisoning. They were exposed to mercury in the felting process, since mercury was rubbed onto the cloth to preserve it.

More information on this story

Dr. Florencio Hernındez
Assistant Professor of Chemistry & Optics
University of Central Florida
Orlando, FL
Tel: 407-823-0843
florenzi@mail.ucf.edu