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Sampling artefacts,concentration and chemical composition of fine water-soluble organic carbon and humic-like substances in a continental urban atmospheric environment
Institution:1. Eötvös University, Institute of Chemistry, H-1518 Budapest, P.O. Box 32, Hungary;2. Ghent University, Institute for Nuclear Sciences, B-9000 Ghent, Proeftuinstraat 86, Belgium;1. University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR 72205, United States;2. University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL 35216, United States;3. States Food and Drug Administration, Jefferson, AR, United States;4. University of Arkansas Stable Isotope Laboratory, Fayetteville, AR, United States
Abstract:Water-soluble organic carbon (WSOC) and atmospheric humic-like substances (HULIS) were investigated for urban PM2.5-fraction aerosol samples, which were collected with the tandem filter method on quartz fibre filters over a non-heating spring season. Sampling artefacts were of importance for all organic chemical fractions, and the back-to-front-filter concentration ratios were on average 28% for WSOC and 17% for HULIS and organic carbon (OC). The difference in the ratios indicates that the water-soluble organics play a more important role in adsorptive artefacts than the organic matter (OM) in general. The results emphasize the need for an appropriate sampling and/or correction method for measuring particulate organic substances in urban environments. The corrected atmospheric concentration of HULIS, obtained by subtracting the back-filter from the front-filter data, was on average 2 μg m?3; which represented 6% of the mean PM2.5 particulate mass, and it made up 45% of the secondary OC. The HULIS carbon accounted for 20% of the OC and 62% of the WSOC, while WSOC made up 32% of OC. The major element composition of HULIS, expressed in molar ratios, was C:H:O:N=22:32:10:1. The molar H/C ratio of 1.49 implies the presence of unsaturated organic compounds, although these were depleted in comparison with rural aerosol or standard fulvic acids. The molar O/C ratio of 0.47 indicates the existence of oxygenated functional groups; comparison to rural aerosol suggests that the (fresh) urban-type aerosol is less oxidized (and, therefore, less water soluble as well) than the rural one. The OM/OC mass conversion factor for the isolated (water-soluble) HULIS was derived to be 1.81. It was inferred from comparisons with published data that there are substantial differences in abundance and chemical composition of HULIS for different environments.
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