Mercury Thermometers Face Final Phase Out
by Peter Gwynne l ISNS
(ISNS) -- The mercury thermometer, long a
fixture in household medicine cabinets and industrial settings, is going
the way of the horse and buggy. The reason: Mercury released into the
environment from a broken thermometer is highly poisonous.
Pure mercury and its compounds can cause neurological problems and other
ailments in people exposed to them. So government and state agencies
have mounted campaigns to end the use of thermometers that contain the
liquid metal.
Effort to end use of
environmentally-dangerous mercury thermometers
nears completion with
cancellation of national calibration service.
Inside Science News Service
NIST will close down its calibration service for mercury thermometers at
the end of this month. The 110 year service has ensured the accuracy of
instruments used to monitor temperatures in chemical, pharmaceutical,
and petroleum facilities.
"We've been working with the EPA and state agencies to help phase out
the whole process of using mercury thermometers," said Gregory Strouse,
leader of NIST's temperature and humidity group. "Anything you can do to
prevent mercury getting into the environment is a good thing."
Mercury from thermometers reaches the environment in two main ways:
improper disposal of broken thermometers and coal-fueled power plants.
According to the EPA, coal-burning power plants account for about half
of the emissions of mercury in the U.S. Mercury vapor can also waft into
the air from broken thermometers. And liquid mercury from those same
breakages can end up in landfills, where microorganisms convert it into a
highly toxic form called methylmercury. This often seeps into rivers
and then the ocean where it accumulates in sea life that absorbs it from
the polluted waters.
Tossing unused or broken mercury thermometers in the trash can contribute to this cycle.
"If you drop a mercury thermometer, contact your local or state
recycling center," Strouse advised. "If you have an intact mercury
thermometer in the house, we suggest that you put it in a soda bottle
and cap it for transport to a disposal site."
Mercury can have significant effects on human health. Its vapor can
cause mood swings, insomnia, and memory loss, and high vapor levels can
damage organs.
Hat makers in the 19th century had a reputation for strange behavior. It
stemmed from their exposure to the mercury solution used to cure animal
pelts. The Mad Hatter in "Alice in Wonderland" illustrated the danger.
More dangerous today are the concentrated mercury levels in the fish we
consume. Small amounts of the compound methylmercury can damage our
nervous systems and can affect the brain development of infants and
young children.
Cleaning up a spill of mercury requires care and a lot of money. It can
cost from $5,000 to $50,000 to clean an industrial spill.
Mercury can be recycled safely. NIST recently sent the mercury from more
than 8,000 industrial thermometers to facilities that use it to produce
compact fluorescent lights. The one-sixtieth of an ounce of mercury in a
typical thermometer is enough to make 125 light bulbs. That form of
recycling has two environmental advantages.
"Most of the mercury is bound to the inside of the glass during the life
cycle of the bulb, a process that makes it much less environmentally
harmful," Strouse said. "And compact fluorescents use less electricity,
which reduces the amount of coal burned. That reduces the amount of
mercury released by a factor of four."
Meanwhile, NIST is working on alternative options for industrial users
in clinical and industrial temperature measurement. And digital
electronic thermometers and glass alcohol thermometers measure
temperatures just as well as mercury instruments for household use.
"Change always brings confusion and apprehension, but in every case
there is an alternative thermometer to suit the measurement need," said
NIST researcher Dawn Cross.