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1.
The concentrations and size distributions of low molecular weight dicarboxylic acids in suburban particulate matter collected in early and mid-autumn 2002 and early and mid-summer 2003 in Tainan, Taiwan, were analyzed. PM2.5 contained, on average, 449.3 ng m−3 oxalic acid, 53.0 ng m−3 malic acid, 45.5 ng m−3 maleic acid, 29.6 ng m−3 succinic acid, 20.8 ng m−3 malonic acid, and 11.6 ng m−3 tartaric acid. Bar tartaric acid, concentrations were higher during the day, indicating that these acids are photochemical products. Furthermore, the malonic acid–succinic acid ratio of 0.79 during daytime and 0.60 during nighttime demonstrates that more succinic acid is converted to malonic acid during daytime, and that aerosol dicarboxylic acids predominantly originate from photochemical oxidation during daytime. The concentration peak of oxalic acid occurred in the condensation and droplet modes (0.32–1.0 μm), as did that of sulfate. In early summer, succinic acid, malonic acid, and oxalic acid major concentration peaks occurred at 0.32–0.54 μm, indicative of the relationship created by photochemical decomposition of succinc acid into malonic acid into oxalic acid. This photochemical decomposition accelerated in mid-summer such that most concentration peaks for succinic and malonic acids also occurred at 0.32–1.0 μm. Mid-summer is also the wettest period of the four in Tainan, with 85% RH. As a result of hygroscopic reactions in mid-summer, malonic acid and oxalic acid major concentration peaks shifted from 0.32–0.54 μm or 0.54–1.0 μm to 1.0–1.8 μm, thus extending the range in which these species were found to larger particle sizes, and this shift was highly correlated with a shift in succinic acid size distribution. This latter observation offers additional evidence that succinic acid is photochemically decomposed into malonic acid and oxalic acid and that the presence of malonic and oxalic acids in the wet mid-summer atmosphere is made more obvious via hygroscopic growth. Close correlation between succinic acid and Na+ and succinic acid and NO3 in the coarse mode is related to sea spray.  相似文献   

2.
The distribution of nano/micron dicarboxylic acids and inorganic ions in size-segregated suburban aerosol of southern Taiwan was studied for a PM episode and a non-episodic pollution period, revealing for the first time the distribution of these nanoscale particles in suburban aerosols. Inorganic species, especially nitrate, were present in higher concentrations during the PM episode. A combination of gas-to-nuclei conversion of nitrate particles and accumulation of secondary photochemical products originating from traffic-related emissions was likely a crucial cause of the PM episode. Sulfate, ammonium, and oxalic acid were the dominant anion, cation, and dicarboxylic acid, respectively, accounting for a minimum of 49% of the total anion, cation or dicarboxylic acid mass. Peak concentrations of these species occurred at 0.54 μm in the droplet mode during both non-episodic and PM episode periods, indicating an association with cloud-processed particles. On average, sulfate concentration was 16–17 times that of oxalic acid. Oxalic acid was nevertheless the most abundant dicarboxylic acid during both periods, followed by succinic, malonic, maleic, malic and tartaric acid. The mass median aerodynamic diameter (MMAD) of oxalic acid was 0.77 μm with a bi-modal presence at 0.54 μm and 18 nm during non-episodic pollution and an MMAD of 0.67 μm with mono-modal presence at 0.54 μm in PM episode aerosol. The concomitant formation of malonic acid and oxalic acid was attributed to in-cloud processes. During the PM episode in the 5–100 nm nanoscale range, an oxalic acid/sulfate mass ratio of 40.2–82.3% suggested a stronger formation potential for oxalic acid than for sulfate in the nuclei mode. For total cations (TC), total inorganic anions (TIA) and total dicarboxylic acids (TDA), major contributing particles were in the droplet mode, with least in the nuclei mode. The ratio of TDA to TIA in the nuclei mode increased greatly from 8.40% during the non-episodic pollution period to 28.08% during the PM episode, favoring dicarboxylic acid formation in the nuclei mode. The evidence suggests stronger formation strength and contribution potential exists for dicarboxylic acids than for inorganic salts in nanoscale particles, especially in PM episode aerosol.  相似文献   

3.
Twelve hours integrated fine particles (PM2.5) and 24-h average size-segregated particles were collected to investigate the chemical characteristics and to determine the size distribution of ionic species during October–December 1999 in three cities of different urban scale; Chongju, Kwangju, and Seoul, Korea. Concentrations of 5-min PM2.5 black carbon (BC) and hourly criteria air pollutants (PM10, CO, NOx, SO2, and O3) were also measured using the Aethalometer and ambient air monitoring system, respectively.Highest PM2.5 mass concentrations at Chongju, Kwangju, and Seoul sites were 63.0, 77.9, and 143.7 μg m−3, respectively. For the time period when highest PM2.5 mass occurred, BC level out of PM2.5 chemical species was highest at both Chongju and Kwangju, and highest NO3 (23.6 μg m−3) followed by BC (23.1 μg m−3) were observed at Seoul site, indicating that highest PM2.5 pollution is closely associated with the traffic emissions. Strong relationships of Fe with BC and Zn at both Kwangju and Seoul sites support that the Fe and Zn measured there are originated partly from same source as BC, i.e. diesel traffics. However, it is suggested that the Fe measured at Chongju is most likely derived from dispersion of soil dust.The size distributions of SO42−, NO3, and NH4+ ionic species indicated similar unimodal distributions at all sampling sites. However, different unimodal patterns in the accumulation mode size range with a peak in the smaller size (0.28–0.53 μm, condensation mode) in both Kwangju and Seoul, and in the relatively larger size (0.53–1.0 μm, droplet mode) in Chongju, were found. The potassium ion under the study sites dominates in the fine mode, and its size distribution showed unimodal character with a maximum in the size range 0.56–1.0 μm.  相似文献   

4.
Fine particle nitrate concentrations were measured at 10-min intervals for approximately 9.5 months beginning on 14 February 2002, at the Baltimore Supersite Ponca St. location using an R&P 8400N semi-continuous monitor. The measurement results were used to characterize seasonal and shorter-term excursions in nitrate concentrations and determine their influence on PM2.5 concentrations. Over the 9.5-month study period, nitrate levels of 1.7±1.6 μg m−3 accounted for 11.4% of the PM2.5 mass. Monthly averages ranged from 0.8 μg m−3 in August to 2.9 μg m−3 in November, and accounted for 4.7–17.3% of monthly PM2.5 mass. Hourly averages, however, were often larger, especially in the colder months, owing to numerous relatively short-term transients, where hourly nitrate concentrations exceeded 5.0 μg m−3. These often occurred along with NOx and ultrafine particle transients during the morning commute hours.A total of 275 short-term transients (31.7% of the total) exceeding 1.0 μg m−3 were identified. These were associated with one of three sets of conditions. The first, most typical (177, i.e. 64.4% of the 275 incidences), is characterized by high NOx typically between 0500 and 0800EST and is attributed to early morning commute traffic activity. The second type occurred during the afternoon due to photochemical activity. The excursions in the afternoon occurred infrequently (only 9.5% of all the observed transients) during the study period and were characterized by less elevated nitrate concentrations than morning and nighttime transients. The third (72, i.e. 26.2% of the 275 transients) occurred at night, typically between 2000EST and 0200EST.Multiple linear regression analysis between nitrate excursions and volume size distributions indicates that particulate nitrate observed is closely related to the near accumulation (0.1–0.2 μm) and droplet modes (0.5–1.0 μm) in the morning hours, and associated with the droplet (0.5–1.0 μm) and coarse modes (1.0–2.5 μm) for nighttime transients, suggesting that processes governing particulate nitrate formation depend on time-of-day.  相似文献   

5.
Accumulation aerosol particle distributions were measured on 14 June 1997 during two research flights over northwestern Greece, including the greater Thessaloniki area (GTA). At flight altitudes of about 5000 m (<550 mb), accumulation mode number particle size distributions appeared to be unimodal with a maximum in the first bin of the measured number size distribution with a mid-point of 0.11 μm. At lower altitudes and over the GTA, accumulation mode particle size distributions were bimodal with a first mode peak at 0.125 μm and a second mode peak at 0.275 μm. The second mode was more pronounced in areas of higher relative humidity, thus indicating the presence of deliquescent aerosols, but also in areas where high O3 concentrations were measured. Ozone concentrations ranged between 25 and 60 ppb at high altitudes east of GTA and between 50 and 110 ppb over the city of Thessaloniki with the maximum measured at an altitude of about 500 m. This is consistent with the local topographical and meteorological conditions, mainly due to the nocturnal inversion and the development of local circulation flows (land and sea breeze) over the city.  相似文献   

6.
The size distribution of metals in aerosols has been studied in 12 areas of the city of Seville. Urban particles were collected with a high-volume sampling system equipped with a cascade impactor, which effectively separates the particulate matter into six-size ranges. Forty-one samples were collected in spring 1996. Each filter was extracted with a mixture of nitric and percloric acids. The acid solutions of the samples were analysed in six-particle fractions by inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry (ICP-AES). The impactor stage fractionation of particles shows a typical bimodal distributions, one corresponding to the fine mode below 1 μm (55%), and the other to the coarse mode around 10 μm (32%). With regard to the size distribution of metals, we concluded that potentially toxic metals, such as nickel, lead and cadmium are mainly accumulated in the smaller particles, with percentages of 72.6, 69.4 and 63.8%, respectively. Lead have a concentration of 63.7 ng m−3, more than copper and manganese (26.7 and 16.5 ng m−3) and above all more than nickel, cobalt and cadmium (1.97, 0.54 and 0.32 ng m−3).  相似文献   

7.
The size distribution of ambient air particles and associated organic pollutants, such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) including hexachlorocyclohexanes (HCHs), DDT and metabolites, etc., was investigated at a traffic-impacted site of Thessaloniki, Greece. Investigation took place during wintertime of 2006 at two heights above ground: at the street level (1.5 m) and at the rooftop level (15 m). Size-resolved samples (<0.95 μm, 0.95–1.5 μm, 1.5–3 μm, 3–7.5 μm and >7.5 μm) were concurrently collected from the two height levels using five-stage high volume cascade impactors. At both heights, particle mass exhibited bimodal distribution with peaks in the 0.95–1.5 μm and the 3–7.5 μm size fractions, whereas most organic pollutants exhibited one peak at 0.95–1.5 μm. Apart from the 0.95–1.5 μm fraction, particle concentrations of all size ranges were significantly higher at the street level than at the rooftop as a result of more intensive vehicular emissions and road dust resuspension. On the contrary, the concentrations of most organic pollutants did not differentiate significantly between the two elevations.  相似文献   

8.
A review of the physical characteristics of sulfur-containing aerosols, with respect to size distribution of the physical distributions, sulfur distributions, distribution modal characteristics, nuclei formation rates, aerosol growth characteristics, and in situ measurement, has been made.Physical size distributions can be characterized well by a trimodal model consisting of three additive lognormal distributions.When atmospheric physical aerosol size distributions are characterized by the trimodal model, the following typical modal parameters are observed:1. Nuclei mode – geometric mean size by volume, DGVn, from 0.015 to 0.04 μm. σgn=1.6, nucler mode volumes from 0.0005 over the remote oceans to 9 μm3 cm−3 on an urban freeway.2. Accumulation mode – geometric mean size by volume, DGVa, from 0.15 to 0.5 μm, σga=1.6–2.2 and mode volume concentrations from 1 for very clean marine or continental backgrounds to as high as 300 μm3 cm−3 under very polluted conditions in urban areas.3. Coarse particle mode – geometric mean size by volume, DGVc, from 5 to 30 μm, σgn=2–3, and mode volume concentrations from 2 to 1000 μm3 cm−3.It has also been concluded that the fine particles (Dp<2 μm) are essentially independent in formation, transformation and removal from the coarse particles (Dp>2 μm).Modal characterization of impactor-measured sulfate size distributions from the literature shows that the sulfate is nearly all in the accumulation mode and has the same size distribution as the physical accumulation mode distribution.Average sulfate aerodynamic geometric mean dia. was found to be 0.48±0.1 μm (0.37±0.1 μm vol. dia.) and σg=2.00±0.29. Concentrations range from a low of about 0.04 μg m−3 over the remote oceans to over 8 μg m−3 under polluted conditions over the continents.Review of the data on nucleation in smog chambers and in the atmosphere suggests that when SO2, is present, SO2-to-aerosol conversion dominates the Aitken nuclei count and, indirectly, through coagulation and condensation, the accumulation mode size and concentration. There are indications that nucleation is ubiquitous in the atmosphere, ranging from values as low as 2 cm−3 h−1 over the clean remote oceans to a high of 6×106 cm−3 h−1 in a power plant plume under sunny conditions.There is considerable theoretical and experimental evidence that even if most of the mass for the condensational growth of the accumulation mode comes from hydrocarbon conversion, sulfur conversion provides most of the nuclei.  相似文献   

9.
Regular measurements of total mass concentration and mass-size distribution of near-surface aerosols, made using a ten-channel Quartz Crystal Microbalance (qcm) Impactor for the period October 1998–December 1999 at the tropical coastal station Trivandrum (8.5°N, 77°E), are used to study the response of aerosol characteristics to regional mesoscale and synoptic processes. Results reveal that aerosol mass concentrations are generally higher under land breeze conditions. The sea breeze generally has a cleansing effect, depleting the aerosol loading. The continental air (LB regime) is richer in accumulation mode (submicron) aerosols than the marine air. On a synoptic scale, aerosol mass concentration in the submicron mode decreased from an average high value of ∼86 μg m−3 during the dry months (January–March) to ∼11 μg m−3 during the monsoon season (June–September). On the contrary mass concentration in the supermicron mode increased from a low value of ∼15 μg m−3 during the dry months to reach a comparatively high value of ∼35 μg m−3 during April, May. Correspondingly, the effective radius (Reff) increased from a low value of 0.15–0.17 μm to ∼0.3 μm indicating a seasonal change in the size distribution. The mass-size distribution shows mainly three modes, a fine mode (∼0.1 μm); a large mode (∼0.5 μm) and a coarse mode (∼3 μm). The fine mode dominates in winter. In summer the large mode becomes more conspicuous and the coarse mode builds up. The fine mode is highly reduced in monsoon and the large and coarse modes continue to remain high (replenished) so that their relative dominance increases. The size distribution tends to revert to the winter pattern in the post-monsoon season. Accumulation (submicron) aerosols account for ∼98% of the total surface area and ∼70% of the total volume of aerosols during winter. During monsoon, even though they still account for ∼90% of the area, their contribution to the volume is reduced to ∼50%; the coarse aerosols account for the rest.  相似文献   

10.
Ambient particulate chemical composition data acquired from samples collected using a three-stage Davis Rotating-drum Universal-size-cut Monitoring (DRUM) impactor in Detroit, MI, between February and April 2002 were analyzed through the application of a three-way factor analysis model. PM2.5 (particulate matter ⩽2.5 μm in aerodynamic diameter) was collected by a DRUM impactor with 3-h time resolution and three size modes (2.5 μm>Dp>1.15 μm, 1.15 μm>Dp>0.34 μm and 0.34 μm>Dp>0.1 μm). A novel three-way factor analysis model was applied to these data where the source profiles are a three-way array of size, composition and source while the contributions are a matrix of sample by source. Nine factors were identified: road salt, industrial (Fe+Zn), cloud processed sulfate, two types of metal works, road dust, local sulfate source, sulfur with dust, and homogeneously formed sulfate. Road salt had high concentrations of Na and Cl. Mixed industrial emissions are characterized by Fe and Zn. The cloud processed sulfate had a high concentration of S in the intermediate size mode. The first metal works represented by Fe in all three size modes and by Zn, Ti, Cu, and Mn. The second included a high concentration of small size particle sulfur with intermediate size Fe, Zn, Al, Si, and Ca. Road dust contained Na, Al, Si, S, K, and Fe in the large size mode. The local and homogeneous sulfate factors show high concentrations of S in the smallest size mode, but different time series behavior in their contributions. Sulfur with dust is characterized by S and a mix of Na, Mg, Al, Si, K, Ca, Ti, and Fe from the medium and large size modes. This study shows that the utilization of time and size resolved DRUM data can assist in the identification of sources and atmospheric processes leading to the observed ambient concentrations.  相似文献   

11.
Sulphate size distributions were measured at the coastal station of Mumbai (formerly Bombay) through 1998, during the Indian ocean experiment (INDOEX) first field phase (FFP), to fill current gaps in size-resolved aerosol chemical composition data. The paper examines meteorological, seasonal and source-contribution effects on sulphate aerosol and discusses potential effects of sulphate on regional climate. Sulphate size-distributions were largely trimodal with a condensation mode (mass median aerodynamic diameter or MMAD 0.6 μm), a droplet mode (MMAD 1.9–2.4 μm) and a coarse mode (MMAD 5 μm). Condensation mode sulphate mass-fractions were highest in winter, consistent with the high meteorological potential for gas-to-particle conversion along with low relative humidity (RH). The droplet mode concentrations and MMADs were larger in the pre-monsoon and winter than in monsoon, implying sulphate predominance in larger sized particles within this mode. In these seasons the high RH, and consequently greater aerosol water in the droplet mode, would favour aerosol-phase partitioning and reactions of SO2. Coarse mode sulphate concentrations were lowest in the monsoon, when continental contribution to sulphate was low and washout was efficient. In winter and pre-monsoon, coarse mode sulphate concentrations were somewhat higher, likely from SO2 gas-to-particle conversion. Low daytime sulphate concentrations with a large coarse fraction, along with largely onshore winds, indicated marine aerosol predominance. High nighttime sulphate concentrations and a coincident large fine fraction indicated contributions from anthropogenic/industrial sources or from gas-to-particle conversion. Monthly mean sulphate concentrations increased with increasing SO2 concentrations, RH and easterly wind direction, indicating the importance of gas-to-particle conversion and industrial sources located to the east. Atmospheric chemistry effects on sulphate size distributions in Mumbai, indicated by this data, must be further examined.  相似文献   

12.
About 60 rainwater samples were collected at west Los Angeles, California in 1981–1984 and were analyzed for C1–C9 monocarboxylic acids (0.33–79 μM, average (av.) 13±15 μM), C2–C10 dicarboxylic acids (2.9–51 μM, av. 7.5±14 μM) and C1–C4 aldehydes (0.85–28 μM, av. 9.2±11 μM). Distributions of monocarboxylic acids show a predominance of formic (average concentration: 6.5 μM) and acetic (av. 5.6 μM) acids followed by propionic acid (av. 0.44 μM). Oxalic acid is the dominant diacid (av. 3.9 μM) followed by succinic acid (av. 1.0 μM). Formaldehyde (av. 6.9 μM) is the dominant aldehyde, with the next most abundant, acetaldehyde, being minor (av. 0.65 μM). For select rain samples described in this paper, were found to comprise monocarboxylic acids 0.9–12.3% (av. 4.4±3.4%), diacids comprise 1.2–9.5% (av. 4.2±3.3%) and aldehydes comprise 0.2–6.2% (av. 2.1±2.2%) of total organic carbon (TOC, 2.0–18.6 mg C l−1; av. 9.8±5.4 mg C l−1). Annual rain fluxes of monocarboxylic acids and aldehydes during 1982–1983 were calculated to be 0.24 and 0.11 g m−2 yr−1, respectively, with an annual estimated wet deposition in the Los Angeles Basin of 3120 and 1430 tons, respectively. These fluxes are equivalent to 2500 times of the acids and 2.5 times of the aldehydes emitted from automobile exhausts in the Los Angeles air basin. This comparison suggests that major portions of the carboxylic acids detected in the rain are not directly emitted from auto-exhausts, but are most likely produced in the atmosphere by gaseous and/or aqueous phase photo-induced reactions.  相似文献   

13.
During the month of August 2004, the size-resolved number concentration of water-insoluble aerosols (WIA) from 0.25 to 2.0 μm was measured in real-time in the urban center of Atlanta, GA. Simultaneous measurements were performed for the total aerosol size distribution from 0.1 to 2.0 μm, the elemental and organic carbon mass concentration, the aerosol absorption coefficient, and the aerosol scattering coefficient at a dry (RH=30%) humidity. The mean aerosol number concentration in the size range 0.1–2.0 μm was found to be 360±175 cm−3, but this quantity fluctuated significantly on time scales of less than one hour and ranged from 25 to 1400 cm−3 during the sample period. The mean WIA concentration (0.25–2.0 μm) was 13±7 cm−3 and ranged from 1 to 60 cm−3. The average insoluble fraction in the size range 0.25–2.0 μm was found to be 4±2.5% with a range of 0.3–38%. The WIA population was found to follow a consistent diurnal pattern throughout the month with concentration maxima concurring with peaks in vehicular traffic flow. WIA concentration also responded to changes in meteorological conditions such as boundary layer depth and precipitation events. The temporal variability of the absorption coefficient followed an identical pattern to that of WIA and ranged from below the detection limit to 55 Mm−1 with a mean of 8±6 Mm−1. The WIA concentration was highly correlated with both the absorption coefficient and the elemental carbon mass concentration, suggesting that WIA measurements are dominated by fresh emissions of elemental carbon. For both the total aerosol and the WIA size distributions, the maximum number concentration was observed at the smallest sizes; however the WIA size distribution also exhibited a peak at 0.45 μm which was not observed in the total population. Over 60% of the particles greater than 1.0 μm were observed to be insoluble in the water sampling stream used by this instrumentation. Due to the refractive properties of black carbon, it is highly unlikely that these particles could be composed of elemental carbon, suggesting a crustal source for super-micron WIA.  相似文献   

14.
Understanding of droplet nuclei dispersion and transport characteristics can provide more engineering strategies to control transmission of airborne diseases. Droplet dispersion in a room under the conventional well-mixed and displacement ventilation is simulated. Two droplet nuclei sizes, 0.01 and 10 μm, are selected as they represent very fine and coarse droplets. The flow field is modeled using k–ε RNG model. A new Eulerian drift-flux methodology is employed to model droplet phase. Under the conventional ventilation scheme, both fine and coarse droplets are homogeneously dispersed within approximately 50 s. Droplet nuclei exhibit distinctive dispersion behavior, particularly for low airflow microenvironment. After 270 s of droplet emission, gravitational settling influences the dispersion for 10 μm droplets, and concentration gradient can still be observed for displacement ventilation.  相似文献   

15.
An instrument was developed for semi-continuous measurement of the size-distribution of submicron nitrate, ammonium, sulphate and chloride. Novel in the instrumentation is the size-classification, which is realised with a pre-separator that consists of a set of four parallel impactors. The cut-off diameters of the impactors are at 0.18, 0.32, 0.56 and 1.0 μm. Aerosols smaller than the associated cut-off size pass the respective impactor and arrive in the detector. The manifold with impactors contains two additional lines, one open line and one containing a filter that removes all aerosols. This latter line provides an on-line field-blank. The sample air-flow is automatically switched by wide-bore ball valves to one of the six sampling lines for a period of 20 min; a measuring cycle thus takes 2 h.Down-stream of the pre-separator the sampling and automated on-line analysis of the transmitted aerosol is accomplished with a “MARGA”. In this instrument steam condensation is used to grow the aerosol. The droplets formed are collected in a cyclone that drains to wet-chemical analysis systems. A wet-denuder between pre-separator and collector removes interfering gases, like nitric acid and ammonia. This enables artefact-free and thus representative semi-continuous measurement of the size-distribution of the semi-volatile (ammonium) nitrate.The novel MARGA-sizer was first used in a 1 week field-test. After modifications it was then deployed in a monitoring campaign of 2 months in the summer of 2002, at the top level of the meteo-tower of Cabauw in the centre of the Netherlands. The high location, 200 m, was chosen to obtain data on ammonium nitrate that are minimally affected by surface emissions of ammonia. The data coverage over the period was over 60%; failure of the instrumentation was mainly associated with spells of extreme solar heating of the tower and associated high temperatures inside.The average concentration of nitrate was 2.6 μg m−3, which was very similar to the value interpolated from data in the national network. The mass concentration of submicron nitrate was 2.0 μg m−3, of which 46% was in particles smaller than 0.32 μm. To put this in perspective: the concentration of submicron sulphate was similar to that of nitrate, while 53% was in particles smaller than 0.32 μm. The ion balance showed that the compounds were present as the fully neutralised salts. Quite large diurnal variations were observed for nitrate, with a surprising maximum in the afternoon. The size-distribution of the semi-volatile nitrate was rather constant over a daily cycle.  相似文献   

16.
During April 1999 and March 2000, intensive field campaigns were performed on a mid-level mountain (Rax, 1644 m a.s.l.) in Central Europe both under out-of-cloud and in-cloud conditions. The black carbon (BC) content of both aerosol and cloud water as well as BC scavenging efficiencies of Rax clouds were measured. As a tracer for the non-carbonaceous aerosol, sulfate was used. Although BC concentrations on Rax were low (April 1999 out-of-cloud average: 0.43 μg/m3, March 2000: 0.72 μg/m3), the BC mass fraction of the aerosol was fairly high (1999: 3.5%, 2000: 6.4%). Average BC concentrations in cloud water were 1.09 μg/ml (1999) and 1.4 μg/ml (2000). These values are far higher than literature values, but comparable to those found in an earlier study (J. Geophys. Res. 105 (D20) (2000) 24637) at a high-level mountain (Sonnblick, 3106 m a.s.l.) some 200 km distant from Rax. The average BC scavenging efficiency of the Rax clouds in March 2000 was 0.54. The increase of scavenging efficiency with increasing liquid water content of the clouds found earlier on Sonnblick for sulfate and aerosol carbon (J. Atmos. Chem 35 (2000) 33), organic carbon (J. Geophys. Res. 105 (2000) 19857), and BC (J. Geophys. Res. 105 (D20) (2000) 24637) was also confirmed on Rax.  相似文献   

17.
PM10 aerosols at McMurdo Station, Antarctica were sampled continuously during the austral summers of 1995–1996 and 1996–1997. PM10 (particles with aerodynamic diameters less than 10 μm) mass concentrations at Hut Point, located less than 1 km from downtown McMurdo, averaged 3.4 μg m−3, more than an order of magnitude lower than the USEPA annual average National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS) of 50 μg m−3. Concentrations of methanesulfonate and nitrate were similar to those measured at other Antarctic coastal sites. Non-sea-salt sulfate (NSS) concentrations on Ross Island were higher than those found at other coastal locations. The average elemental carbon concentration (129 ng m−3) downwind of the station was two orders of magnitude higher than those measured at remote coastal and inland Antarctic sites during summer. Average sulfur dioxide concentrations (746 ng m−3) were 3–44 times higher than those reported for coastal Antarctica. Concentrations of Pb and Zn were 17 and 46 times higher than those reported for the South Pole. A methanesulfonate to biogenic sulfate ratio (R) of 0.47 was derived that is consistent with the proposed temperature dependence of R.  相似文献   

18.
The size-fractionated particulate mercury in ambient air was collected at the top of a university campus building in Shanghai from March 2002 to September 2003. Wet digestion followed by cold vapor atom adsorption spectroscopy (CVAAS) was employed to analyze total particulate mercury concentration. Two-step extraction was performed to differentiate volatile particle-phase mercury (VPM), reactive particle-phase mercury (RPM) and inert particle-phase mercury (IPM). The average concentrations of mercury in PM1.6, PM8 and total suspended particle (TSP) were 0.058–0.252, 0.148–0.398 and 0.233–0.529 ng m−3, respectively. About 50%–60% of mercury in PM8 was in PM1.6, and about 60%–70% of mercury in TSP was in PM8. Particulate mercury was mainly concentrated on fine particles. The mercury fraction in fine particulate matters (<1.6 μm) was over 4 μg g−1 while 1–2 μg g−1 in TSP. Both were much higher than background values, suggesting that anthropogenic sources are the predominant emission contributors. Seasonal variation indicated that the mercury in TSP in spring was higher than that in summer; however, the mercury in fine particles (<1.6 μm) varied little. The fact that fine particulate mercury (<1.6 μm) was well correlated with sulfate and elemental carbon, but not with fluoride, chloride, nitrate and organic carbon, demonstrates that fine particulate mercury is closely associated with stationary sources and gas–particle transformation. Speciation analysis of mercury showed that VPM fraction decreased with the decrease of particle size, while IPM fraction increased and occupied over 50% in particle <1.6 μm. The detailed species in VPM, RPM and IPM were discussed. Coal burning was estimated to contribute approximately 80% of total atmospheric mercury.  相似文献   

19.
Intensive aircraft- and ground-based measurements of ultrafine to supermicron particles in the Osaka metropolitan area, Japan, were carried out on 17–19 March 2003, in order to investigate vertical profiles of size-resolved particles in the urban atmosphere. Differently sized particles were observed at different altitudes on 19 March. Relatively higher concentrations of ultrafine particles (31 nm) and submicron particles (0.3–0.5 μm) were measured (100–200 cm−3) at altitudes of 300 and 600 m, whereas supermicron particles (2–5 μm) were present (300–600 cm−3) at higher altitudes (1300 m in the morning and 2200 m in the afternoon). The chemical composition analysis showed that supermicron particles evidently comprised mainly soil particles mixed internally with anthropogenic species such as carbonaceous components and sulfate. Numerical simulation using the Chemical weather FORecasting System (CFORS) suggested the long-range transport of soil dust and black carbon from the Asian continent. Total number concentrations of particles sized 10–875 nm ranged from 4.8×103 to 3.0×104 cm−3 at an altitude of 300 m and from 7.3×102 to 4.8×103 cm−3 at an altitude of 1300 m. Total number concentrations of particles sized 10–875 nm correlated very well with NOX concentrations, and, therefore, ultrafine and submicron particles were likely emitted from urban activities such as car traffic and vertically transported. Number size distributions at lower altitudes obtained by aircraft measurements were similar to those obtained by ground measurements, with modal diameters of 20–30 nm on 18 March and about 50 nm on 19 March.  相似文献   

20.
Characteristic parameters of black carbon aerosol (BC) emitted from jet engine were measured during ground tests and in-flight behind the same aircraft. Size distribution features were a primary BC mode at a modal diameter D≈0.045 μm, and a BC agglomeration mode at D<0.2 μm. The total BC number concentration at the engine exit was 2.9×107 cm-3 with good agreement between model results and in-flight measured number concentrations of non-volatile particles with D⩾0.014 μm. A comparison between total number concentration of BC particles and the non-volatile fraction of the total aerosol at the exit plane suggests that the non-volatile fraction of jet engine exhaust aerosol consists almost completely of BC. In-flight BC mass emission indices ranged from 0.11 to 0.15 g BC (kg fuel)-1. The measured in-flight particle emission value was 1.75±0.15×1015 kg-1 with corresponding ground test values of 1.0–8.7×1014 kg-1. Both size distribution properties and mass emission indices can be scaled from ground test to in-flight conditions. Implications for atmospheric BC loading, BC and cirrus interaction and the potential of BC for perturbation of atmospheric chemistry are briefly outlined.  相似文献   

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