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Iron isotopic fractionation in industrial emissions and urban aerosols
Authors:Flament Pascal  Mattielli Nadine  Aimoz Laure  Choël Marie  Deboudt Karine  de Jong Jeroen  Rimetz-Planchon Juliette  Weis Dominique
Institution:aUMR CNRS 8101 “LPCA”, Université du Littoral-Côte d’Opale, 189A, Av. Maurice Schumann, F-59140 Dunkerque, France;bDépartement des Sciences de la Terre et de l’Environnement (DSTE), CP 160/02, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Av. FD Roosevelt 50, B-1050 Brussels, Belgium;cDépartement Chimie-Environnement, Ecole des Mines de Douai, BP 838, F-59508 Douai Cedex, France;dPacific Centre for Isotopic and Geochemical Research, Department of Earth and Ocean Sciences, University of British Columbia, 6339 Stores Road, Vancouver, BC, Canada V6T-1Z4
Abstract:A study on tropospheric aerosols involving Fe particles with an industrial origin is tackled here. Aerosols were collected at the largest exhausts of a major European steel metallurgy plant and around its near urban environment. A combination of bulk and individual particle analysis performed by SEM–EDX provides the chemical composition of Fe-bearing aerosols emitted within the factory process (hematite, magnetite and agglomerates of these oxides with sylvite (KCl), calcite (CaCO3) and graphite carbon). Fe isotopic compositions of those emissions fall within the range (0.08‰ < δ56Fe < +0.80‰) of enriched ores processed by the manufacturer (−0.16‰ < δ56Fe < +1.19‰). No significant evolution of Fe fractionation during steelworks processes is observed. At the industrial source, Fe is mainly present as oxide particles, to some extent in 3–4 μm aggregates. In the close urban area, 5 km away from the steel plant, individual particle analysis of collected aerosols presents, in addition to the industrial particle type, aluminosilicates and related natural particles (gypsum, quartz, calcite and reacted sea salt). The Fe isotopic composition (δ56Fe = 0.14 ± 0.11‰) measured in the close urban environment of the steel metallurgy plant appears coherent with an external mixing of industrial and continental Fe-containing tropospheric aerosols, as evidenced by individual particle chemical analysis. Our isotopic data provide a first estimation of an anthropogenic source term as part of the study of photochemically promoted dissolution processes and related Fe fractionations in tropospheric aerosols.
Keywords:Fe aerosols  Fe isotopes  Single-particle analysis  SEM–  EDX  Industrial emissions  Steel metallurgy
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