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Anthropogenic Calcium Particles Observed in Beijing and Qingdao, China
Authors:Daizhou Zhang  Guangyu Shi  Yasunobu Iwasaka  Min Hu  Jiaye Zang
Institution:(1) Faculty of Environmental and Symbiotic Sciences, Prefectural University of Kumamoto, Kumamoto 862-8502, Japan;(2) Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Science, Beijing, 100029, China;(3) Graduate School of Environmental Sciences, Nagoya University, Nagoya 464-8601, Japan;(4) LAES, Center of Environment Sciences, Peking University, Beijing, China;(5) State Oceanic Administration, First Institute of Oceanography, Qingdao, 266061, China
Abstract:Analysis of individual particles collected at Beijing in northern China revealed that particles abundant in calcium (Ca) always constituted a large fraction of mineral particles in the urban atmosphere. The particles were characterized by cubic morphologies. The major mineral element in the particles was Ca and few or no other mineral elements were detected. A large number of the particles were in the range of diameter <1 μm, where common natural mineral particles were rarely detected. The contribution of the Ca particles to the volume of total mineral particles greatly exceeded that of other mineral particles during non-dust-storm periods and was comparable to that during dust-storm periods. Reagent film tests showed that particulate sulfate and nitrate formation on the Ca particles was similar to that on common mineral particles. These results indicate that a large portion of Ca in the atmospheric particulate matter in Beijing was from anthropogenic sources rather than from natural sources, and the anthropogenic Ca particles acted as a significant medium for the formation of sulfate and nitrate. Similar particles were also detected at Qingdao, a coastal city in northern China. Data of a dust storm event showed that Ca-abundant particles from East China arrived there and moved out of the continent, similarly to Asian dust storm particles, suggesting possible contributions of anthropogenic Ca even in Asian dust storm samples in the downstream areas. Therefore, Ca may not be a good indicator of Asian dust from natural sources. However, the Ca particles, due to their unique shapes and elemental compositions, may provide an indicator for the atmospheric dispersion of anthropogenic particulate matters in East Asia.
Keywords:anthropogenic Ca  dust storm  East Asia  mineral particles
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