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1.
To determine the nature of aerosol particles in a rural area of the eastern United States, aerosol samples were collected at Deep Creek Lake, Maryland, on various substrates and analyzed by a scanning electron microscope (SEM) and a transmission electron microscope (TEM). SEM analysis of particles larger than 2.5 μm collected on Nuclepore filters revealed the following: clay minerals, quartz, gypsum, and calcite comprised 50 percent of the particles analyzed; spores, pollen, and plant debris comprised 25 percent; 9 percent were fly ash; 11 percent were sulfates; 5 percent were unidentified. Particles ranging from 0.3 to 2 μm were collected in a cascade impactor on grid-supported carbon films and analyzed by TEM for decomposition rate as well as for reaction with the barium chloride and nitron (C20H16N4) films that were applied after sampling. The TEM analyses indicated that as much as 95 percent of the particles in the 0.3- to 2-μm diameter range were pure ammonium sulfate or acidic ammonium sulfate; they contained essentially no insoluble or nonvolatile matter. About 5 percent of the particles were fly ash spheres. When replicas of particles collected on Nucleopore filters were analyzed by TEM, we observed agglomerates of particles smaller than 0.1 μm.  相似文献   

2.
Physical and chemical properties of submicrometer aerosol particles were measured in summer 2004 (June/July) and winter 2005 (January/February) in Beijing, Peoples Republic of China, using a Twin-Differential Mobility Particle Sizer (T-DMPS), a Hygroscopicity-Tandem Differential Mobility Analyzer (H-TDMA), and a Micro Orifice Uniform Deposit Impactor (MOUDI). Particle number–size distributions were measured in the diameter range Dp = 3–800 nm and hygroscopic properties were determined at initial dry particle diameters of Dpj (j = 30, 50, 80, 150, 250, and 350 nm) at a relative humidity (RH) of 90%. Hygroscopic properties were compared with chemical analyses of aerosol samples taken with the MOUDI. Based on the hygroscopicity data, the total hygroscopic particle volume was modeled, including dependence on dry particle size, season and level of pollution using a simple approach.Overall, the chemical analysis showed ammonium sulfate to be the major inorganic component of the urban submicrometer aerosol in Beijing along with relatively high fractions of elemental carbon (10–25%) and organic matter (15–60%) depending on particle size and season.The hygroscopic growth distributions (H-TDMA) subdivided the aerosol population into three different groups of particles with varying growth factors depending on dry particle size, namely nearly hydrophobic (growth factor = 0.96–1.07), less hygroscopic (1.06–1.29) and more hygroscopic (1.26–1.62).Hydrophobic particle fractions indicating freshly emitted soot/carbonaceous particles varied between 10 and 32% depending on dry particle size and season. During heavily polluted times, a decreasing number of hydrophobic particle fractions indicated that the urban submicrometer aerosol in Beijing was highly influenced by more aged aerosol transported from the industrial regions around Beijing containing sulfate as a major component.Based on model calculations, the urban submicrometer aerosol in Beijing showed strong compositional variations. The calculated total hygroscopic volume fractions varied between 16 and 65% depending on size, level of pollution and season.  相似文献   

3.
Individual aerosol particles were collected on three days with different meteorological conditions in June 2000 in the urban atmosphere of Tsukuba, Japan. The samples collected with an electrostatic aerosol sampler (EAS) were examined by electron microscopy. The mixing properties of submicrometer aerosol particles of 0.02–0.2 μm radius were studied using the dialysis (extraction) of water-soluble material. Atmospheric aerosol particles were classified into four types with respect to the mixtures of water-soluble and water-insoluble material. The proportions of particles with water-soluble material (hygroscopic particles) ranged from 20% to 80% in the whole radius range and tended to increase with increasing radius. Moreover, by the morphological appearance, soot-containing particles were classified into two types, i.e., externally mixed soot-particles and internally mixed soot-particles. The number fractions of internally mixed soot-particles increased with increasing radius. It is found that the volume fraction of water-soluble material (ε) for the internally mixed soot-particles increased with increasing radius. In a “polluted” case, the sample showed a dominant number fraction (75%) of internally mixed soot-particles in the larger radius range of 0.1–0.2 μm.  相似文献   

4.
A quantitative single-particle analytical technique, called low-Z particle electron probe X-ray microanalysis, combined with the utilization of their morphological information on individual particles, was applied to characterize six aerosol samples collected in one Korean city, Incheon, during March 9–15, 2006. The collected supermicron aerosol particles were classified based on their chemical species and morphology on a single-particle basis. Many different particle types were identified and their emission source, transport, and reactivity in the air were elucidated. In the samples, particles in the “soil-derived particles” group were the most abundant, followed by “reacted sea-salts”, “reacted CaCO3-containing particles”, “genuine sea-salts”, “reacted sea-salts + others”, “Fe-containing particles”, “anthropogenic organics”, (NH4)2SO4, “K-containing particles”, and “fly ash”. The application of this single-particle analysis, fully utilizing their chemical compositional and morphological data of individual particles, clearly revealed the different characteristics of the six aerosol samples. For samples S3 and S5, which were sampled during two Asian dust storm events, almost all particles were of soil origin that had not experienced chemical modification and that did not entrain sea-salts during their long-range transport. For sample S1, collected at an episodic period of high PM10 concentration and haze, anthropogenic, secondary, and soil-derived particles emitted from local sources were predominant. For samples S2, S4, and S6, which were collected on average spring days with respect to their PM10 concentrations, marine originated particles were the most abundant. Sample S2 seems to have been strongly influenced by emissions from the Yellow Sea and Korean peninsula, sample S4 had the minimum anthropogenic influence among the four samples collected in the absence of any Asian dust storm event, and sample S6 seems to have entrained air pollutants that had been transported from mainland China over the Yellow Sea to Korea.  相似文献   

5.
Individual aerosol particles were collected on 5 days with different meteorological conditions in March, April and June 1991 in the urban atmosphere of Vienna in Austria. The samples collected with an impactor were examined by electron microscopy. The mixing properties of submicrometer aerosol particles with radii between 0.1 and 1 μm were studied by using the dialysis (extraction) of water-soluble material. The averaged results showed that more than 85% of particles with radii between 0.1 and 0.7 μm were hygroscopic. However, more than 50% of particles with radii larger than 0.2 μm were mixed particles (hygroscopic particles with water-insoluble inclusions), and they were dominant (80%) in the size range 0.5–0.7 μm radius. The results also showed that the number proportion of mixed particles increased with increasing radius and the abundance increased with increasing particle loading in the atmosphere. The volume fraction of water-soluble material (ε) in mixed particles tended to decrease with increasing radius, implying the formation of mixed particles by heterogeneous processes such as condensation and/or surface reaction. Some results of elemental composition in individual particles analyzed with an energy-dispersive X-ray (EDX) analyzer equipped with an electron microscope are also presented in this paper.  相似文献   

6.
The elemental composition of individual aerosol particles of 0.15–3 μm radius, collected over Kalimantan during the 1997 Indonesian forest fire event, was analyzed using a transmission electron microscope equipped with an energy-dispersive X-ray analyzer (EDX). Although 60–90% of the particles collected at altitudes of 1–5 km contained K, they exhibited high weight ratios of S/K with median values of 9–18 independent of particle size. These were much larger than those (median values of 2–4) obtained from the forest fires in northern Australia. The high weight ratios over Kalimantan are considered to be due to the heterogeneous growth of particles through the oxidation of SO2. In addition to SO2 from the combustion of forest biomass, SO2 originating from the combustion of peat below the ground is believed to have been important in producing the high S/K ratios.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract

Nylon filters are a popular medium to collect atmospheric fine particles in different aerosol monitoring networks, including those operated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Interagency Monitoring of Protected Visual Environments (IMPROVE) program. Extraction of the filters by deionized water or by a basic aqueous solution (typically a mixture of sodium carbonate and sodium bicarbonate) is often performed to permit measurement of the inorganic ion content of the collected particles. Whereas previous studies have demonstrated the importance of using a basic solution to efficiently extract gaseous nitric acid collected using nylon filters, there has been a recent movement to the use of deionized water for extraction of particles collected on nylon filters to eliminate interference from sodium ion (Na+) during ion chromatographic analysis of inorganic aerosol cations. Results are reported here from a study designed to investigate the efficiency of deionized water extraction of aerosol nitrate (NO3 ?) and sulfate from nylon filters. Data were obtained through the conduct of five field experiments at selected IMPROVE sites. Results indicate that the nylon filters provide superior retention of collected fine particle NO3 ?, relative to Teflon filters, and that deionized water extraction (with ultrasonication) of collected NO3 ? and sulfate is as efficient, for the situations studied, as extraction using a basic solution of 1.7 mM sodium bicarbonate and 1.8 mM sodium carbonate.  相似文献   

8.
Aerosol matter in the size range <2 μm was collected in a Berner impactor and subsequently analysed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and energy dispersive X-ray (EDX) spectrometry. Owing to the low electron beam energy of 5 keV (occasionally 10 keV), analysis was restricted to elements with atomic numbers 20 (Ca). Sub-micrometer aerosol matter was found to contain mostly S, O, and C as well as some K and Ca. Nitrogen appeared to escape detection, probably due to bombardment-induced sublimation of NO3 and NH4. During sampling at low to moderate relative humidity (<60%) the sulphur-rich fraction of the aerosol matter (most likely sulphates) regrew in the form of microcrystals with sizes up to 10 times larger than the mean aerodynamic diameter of the respective impactor stage. By contrast, when sampling during periods in course of which the relative humidity exceeded 70%, the aerosol matter regrew in the form of extended amorphous agglomerates. The aerosol deposits also contained large numbers of carbon nanoparticles, well separated from the regrown sulphate-rich matter. The nanoparticles were similar in size (20–40 nm), much smaller than the equivalent aerodynamic diameter of the impacting particles (63 nm–2 μm). Presumably, the carbon nanoparticles constituted the core of larger air-borne particles covered with sulphates (as well as with nitrates and organic carbon). The regrown microcrystals disappeared rapidly under electron bombardment at high current density, an observation that indicates high volatility at elevated temperatures. Aerosol matter collected in the size range between 1 and 2 μm contained large fractions of particles made of O, Si, P, K, and Ca (oxides). These particles were highly resistant to electron bombardment (hard) and showed little or no evidence for agglomeration or regrowth. After removing the soluble (acidic) material from the collected aerosol matter, only carbon nanoparticles and hard coarse particles were left behind. The observation of agglomerated or crystallized “soft” aerosol matter in combination with phase separation of carbon nanoparticles lends further support to the assertion that it is not possible to collect useful quantities of fine and ultrafine aerosol particles with as-suspended morphology. Some implications for health-related research are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Number distribution data for 0.1–45 μm diameter aerosol were obtained using optical counting and sizing probes flown over the Alaskan Arctic during the second Arctic Gas and Aerosol Sampling Program (AGASP-II), flights 201–203. Due to noise present in the lowest size channels of the optical probes, estimates of the H2SO4 component of Arctic haze were not attempted. Large particle (> 0.5 μm diameter) results are presented here. Large particle number and volume concentration were determined along with estimated mass, which was generally </ 0.1μg m−3. Lognormal fitting to > 0.3 μg m−3 mass loading sizedistributed aerosol data produced a means for comparing volume geometric median diameters (VGMD) for these higher-mass time intervals. These VGMDs showed that solid crustal particles previously observed during AGASP-II had VGMDs in the 1.2–1.6 μm range and that the shape of these fitted lognormal distributions was essentially constant. This result suggests very-long-range transport from a distant crustal source and, in conjunction with aerosol physical and chemical characterization data, argues against the presence of the Mt. Augustine eruptive particles during AGASP-II Alaskan Arctic sampling.  相似文献   

10.
Atmospheric aerosol particles in urban and mountain areas around Lhasa city (29.65°N, 91.13°E) in the Tibetan Plateau were collected in the summers of 1998 and 1999. The particles were analyzed with electron microscopes and an energy dispersive X-ray spectrometer. Individual particle morphology, elemental composition and mixture of sulfate and nitrate were investigated. In the urban area, soot particles emitted from vegetation burning were dominant. These particles were characterized by chain or aggregate morphologies, and an elemental composition of potassium and sulfur. Such particles were frequently detected in mountain areas out of the city, where they formed droplets acting as condensation nuclei. Quantitative estimation indicated that sulfur was accumulated onto the soot particles during their dispersion from the urban area to mountain areas. Sulfate and nitrate detections indicated that soot particles collected in the urban area did not contain nitrate and BaCl2-reactive sulfate, which revealed that the combination of sulfur and potassium in the particles was not K2SO4. In contrast, the particles dispersed to mountain areas contained BaCl2-reactive sulfate and some contained nitrate, suggesting that soot particles emitted from the urban area could increase the buffering capacity of aerosol particles and enhance the formation of particulate sulfate through heterogeneous conversion in the Tibetan atmosphere.  相似文献   

11.
As a part of a receptor model study of the Philadelphia, PA atmosphere, particulate samples were collected from seven air pollution sources in the area: two oil-fired power plants, a coal-fired power plant, a fluidized catalytic cracker, a refuse incinerator, a secondary aluminum smelter and an antimony ore roaster. Samples were collected In two size fractions with a dilution source sampler connected to a modified dichotomous sampler. Masses of collected material were determined gravlmetrlcally. Samples were analyzed for elements by x-ray fluorescence followed by Instrumental neutron activation analysis of some samples. Other samples were analyzed by chemical methods for volatile and nonvolatile carbon, SO4 2? and NH4 +. Data are presented for up to 46 elements and species on fine (<2.5-μm aerodynamic equivalent diameter) and coarse (2.5 μm < diam < 7-10 μm) particles from each source. Although the data were collected for use in Philadelphia, they should be of value for receptor modeling of other areas having similar sources. The most unexpected results were the large amounts of rare earth elements on particles from the catalytic cracker (e.g., 0.31 percent La In fine fraction) and the oil-fired power plants (120 and 420 ppm La in fine fraction). Substantial amounts of primary SO4 2? are released from the oil-fired plants, the SO4 2? concentrations accounting for 40-45 percent of the fine particulate mass.  相似文献   

12.
A field evaluation between two annular denuder configurations was conducted during the spring of 2003 in the marine Arctic at Ny-Ålesund, Svalbard. The IIA annular denuder system (ADS) employed a series of five single-channel annular denuders, a cyclone and a filter pack to discriminate between gas and aerosol species, while the EPA-Versatile Air Pollution Sampler (VAPS) configuration used a single multi-channel annular denuder to protect the integrity of PM2.5 sample filters by collecting acidic gases. We compared the concentrations of gaseous nitric acid (HNO3), nitrous acid (HONO), sulfur dioxide (SO2) and hydrochloric acid (HCl) measured by the two systems. Results for HNO3 and SO2 suggested losses of gas phase species within the EPA-VAPS inlet surfaces due to low temperatures, high relative humidities, and coarse particle sea-salt deposition to the VAPS inlet during sampling. The difference in HNO3 concentrations (55%) between the two data sets might also be due to the reaction between HNO3 and NaCl on inlet surfaces within the EPA-VAPS system. Furthermore, we detected the release of HCl from marine aerosol particles in the EPA-VAPS inlet during sampling contributing to higher observed concentrations. Based on this work we present recommendations on the application of denuder sampling techniques for low-concentration gaseous species in Arctic and remote marine locations to minimize sampling biases. We suggest an annular denuder technique without a large surface area inlet device in order to minimize retention and/or production of gaseous atmospheric pollutants during sampling.  相似文献   

13.
During August, 1982 and January and February, 1983, General Motors Research Laboratories operated air monitoring sites on the Atlantic Coast near Lewes, Delaware and 1250 km to the east on the southwest coast of Bermuda. The overall purpose of this project was to study the transformations of the principal acid precipitation precursors, NO x and SO x species, as they transport under conditions not complicated by emissions from local sources. In this paper, the measurements of gas and particulate species from Lewes are described and the composition and sources of sulfate aerosol, which is the most important haze-producing species, are investigated.

On the average, the total suspended particulate (TSP) concentration was 27.9 μg/m3 while the PM10 (mass of particles with a diameter less than or equal to 10 μm) concentration was 22.0 μg/m3 or 79 percent of the TSP. The PM10 consisted of 6.1 μg/m3 of coarse particles (CPM, diameter = 2.5 ? 10μm) and 15.9 μg/m3 of fine particles (FPM, diameter < 2.5 μm).

On a mass basis the most important constituents of the fine particulate fraction were sulfate compounds, 50 percent, and organic compounds, 30 percent. The mean light extinction coefficient corresponds to a visual range of 18-20 km. Most of the extinction can be attributed to the sulfate (60 percent) and organic carbon (13 percent). Particle size measurements show that the mass median aerodynamic diameter for both species is 0.43 μm. This is a typical size for a hydrated sulfate aerosol. For carbon, however, this is a larger size than previously reported and results in a more efficient light scattering aerosol. Principal component analyses indicate that coal combustion emissions from the midwestern U.S. are the most significant source of sulfate in Lewes during the summer and winter.  相似文献   

14.
Ten aircraft-collected cascade impactor samples from the North American Arctic were analyzed using analytical electron microscopy. Morphological, mineralogical and elemental information were obtained from individual particles, as well as compositional data and size distribution estimates of the bulk aerosol. Categorization of carbonaceous material into organic-type and combustion-type carbon particles was performed in this study. This was accomplished through the use of a new ultra-thin window X-ray spectrometer, which can directly detect carbon X-rays emitted from particles, and through interpretation of morphological and electron diffraction data. Verification of graphite as a specific carbon mineral phase present in Arctic soot particles was performed in this manner.Several classes of particles were present in most of the aerosol samples and size fractions. These included liquid H2SO4 droplets, which were always present in the highest numbers, and crustal-type and composite SO4−2 particles. A small fraction (0–30%) of a random sampling of SO2−4particles from all impactor stages were found to contain detectable nitrogen, suggesting that partial neutralization by NH3 may have occurred in this minority of the SO2−4 droplets. Particles rich in non-combustion carbon and thought to be composed of organic material were also observed in most samples. Haze samples collected off the coast of Alert, NWT, show moderate loadings of H2SO4 droplets. Judging from these loadings and those from higher-altitude samples, ambient aerosol particle concentrations must have been considerably higher in the haze. The extent to which local activity at Alert has influenced these haze samples is not known, although a major contribution is not expected. Stratospheric samples did not contain several classes of particles thought to have major anthropogenic source inputs to the Arctic, such as black carbon and coal-fired combustion spheres. The lightest particle loadings in any samples were collected in the upper troposphere near the tropopause, where condensation nuclei counts during sampling fell to as low as 10 cm−3.  相似文献   

15.
A receptor model of positive matrix factorization (PMF) was used to identify the emission sources of fine and coarse particulates in Bandung, a city located at about 150 km south-east of Jakarta. Total of 367 samples were collected at urban mixed site, Tegalega area, in Bandung City during wet and dry season in the period of 2001–2007. The samples of fine and coarse particulate matter were collected simultaneously using dichotomous samplers and mini-volume samplers. The Samples from dichotomous Samplers were analyzed for black carbon and elements while samples from mini-volume samplers were analyzed for ions. The species analyzed in this study were Na, Mg, Al, Si, K, Ca, Ti, Cr, Mn, Fe, Ni, Cu, Pb, Cl?, NO3?, SO42?, and NH4+. The data were then analyzed using PMF to determine the source factors. Different numbers of source factors were found during dry and wet season. During dry season, the main source factors for fine particles were secondary aerosol (NH4)2SO4, electroplating industry, vehicle emission, and biomass burning, while for coarse particles, the dominant source factors were electroplating industry, followed by aged sea salt, volcanic dust, soil dust, and lime dust. During the wet season, the main source factors for fine particulate matter were vehicle emission and secondary aerosol. Other sources detected were biomass burning, lime dust, soil and volcanic dust. While for coarse particulate matter, the main source factors were sulphate-rich industry, followed by lime dust, soil dust, industrial emission and construction dust.  相似文献   

16.
Determination of the chemical compositions of atmospheric single particles in the Yellow Sea region is critical for evaluating the environmental impact caused by air pollutants emitted from mainland China and the Korean peninsula. After ambient aerosol particles were collected by the Dekati PM10 cascade impactor on July 17–23, 2007 at Tokchok Island (approximately 50 km west of the Korean coast nearby Seoul), Korea, overall 2000 particles (on stage 2 and 3 with cut-off diameters of 2.5–10 μm and 1.0–2.5 μm, respectively) in 10 samples were determined by using low-Z particle electron probe X-ray microanalysis. X-ray spectral and secondary electron image (SEI) data showed that soil-derived and sea-salt particles which had reacted or were mixed with SO2 and NOx (or their acidic products) outnumbered the primary and “genuine” ones (59.2% vs. 19.2% in the stage 2 fraction and 41.3% vs. 9.9% in the stage 3 fraction). Moreover, particles containing nitrate in the secondary soil-derived species greatly outnumbered those containing sulfate. Organic particles, mainly consisting of marine biogenic species, were more abundant in the stage 2 fraction than in the stage 3 fraction (11.6% vs. 5.1%). Their relative abundance was greater than the sum of carbon-rich, K-containing, Fe-containing, and fly ash particles, which exhibited low frequencies in all the samples. In addition, many droplets rich in C, N, O, and S were observed. They tended to be small, exhibiting a dark round shape on SEI, and generally included 8–20 at.% C, 0–12 at.% N, 60–80 at.% O, and 4–10 at.% S (sometimes with <3 at.% Mg and Na). They were attributed to be a mixture of carbonaceous matter, H2SO4, and NH4HSO4/(NH4)2SO4, mostly from the reaction of atmospheric SO2 with NH3 under high relative humidity. The analysis of the relationship between the aerosol particle compositions and 72-h backward air-mass trajectories suggests that ambient aerosols at Tokchok Island are strongly affected not only by seawater from the Yellow Sea but also by anthropogenic pollutants emitted from China and the Seoul–Incheon metropolis, resulting in the dominance of complex secondary aerosol particles.  相似文献   

17.
ABSTRACT

To investigate the chemical characteristics of fine particles in the Sihwa area, Korea, atmospheric aerosol samples were collected using a dichotomous PM10 sampler and two URG PM2.5 cyclone samplers during five intensive sampling periods between February 1998 and February 1999. The Inductively Coupled Plasma (ICP)-Atomic Emission Spectrometry (AES)/ICP-Mass Spectrometry (MS), ion chromatograph (IC), and thermal manganese dioxide oxidation (TMO) methods were used to analyze the trace elements, ionic species, and carbonaceous species, respectively. Backward trajectory analysis, factor analysis, and a chemical mass balance (CMB) model were used to estimate quantitatively source contributions to PM2 5 particles collected in the Sihwa area.

The results of PM2.5 source apportionment using the CMB7 receptor model showed that (NH4)2SO4 was, on average, the major contributor to PM2.5 particles, followed by nontraffic organic carbon (OC) emission, NH4NO3, agricultural waste burning, motor vehicle emission, road dust, waste incineration, marine aerosol, and others. Here, the nontraffic OC sources include primary anthropogenic OC emitted from the industrial complex zone, secondary OC, and organic species from distant sources. The source impact of waste incineration emission became significant when the dominant wind directions were from southwest and west sectors during the sampling periods. It was found that PM2.5 particles in the Sihwa area were influenced mainly by both anthropogenic local sources and long-range transport and transformation of air pollutants.  相似文献   

18.
Various forms of phosphorus were measured in marine aerosol particles and rain samples collected from the northern tip of the North Island of New Zealand. Approximately 58 % of the total phosphorus in the aerosol particles was organic and 7 % was soluble in deionized water. The remaining 35 % was not released by treatment with potassium persulfate, and it was defined as a refractory fraction. Stepwise regression analyses suggested that (1) the concentrations of organic phosphorus in the aerosol particles were related to those of sodium, which was regarded as sea salt tracer, (2) the concentrations of water soluble phosphorus were correlated with those of aluminum, which was considered an indicator of crustal material and (3) total phosphorus was derived from the ocean and from the earth's crust. The mass particle-size distribution of the refractory and organic phosphorus combined was similar to that of sodium and aluminum. However, on submicrometer particles the concentrations of all forms of phosphorus appeared to increase relative to those of sodium, suggesting that small particle phosphorus may be derived from a non-marine source, possibly weathered crustal material or wind blown fertilizer. The wet deposition rates for water soluble and organic phosphorus were calculated to be 0.30 and 0.61 μg cm −2 y −1, respectively. The dry deposition of these two forms of phosphorus combined (0.14 μg cm −2 y −1 ) was clearly lower than the wet deposition rate. Total deposition of phosphorus to the site was estimated to be 1.5μgcm−2y−1.  相似文献   

19.
Fog water, aerosol, and gas were separately collected at Mt. Rokko (altitude 931 m) in Kobe, Japan, using a new sampling method at a mountainous site near a highly industrialized area. The fog water was collected by an active string-fog collector and the aerosol and gas by using the filter pack method. Using plural filter packs and controlling or switching the airflow before, during, and after a fog event made it possible to collect the fog water, aerosol, and gas separately. Nitrate species such as NO3(p) and HNO3(g) were effectively scavenged by fog water, while sulfur species such as SO42−(p) and SO2(g) could not be easily and effectively scavenged because of the poor solubility of SO2(g). This difficulty was experimentally examined through an in situ investigation. Ion species (especially Na+(p) and Ca2+(p)) which form coarse particles were easily and effectively scavenged by fog water. On the other hand, the difficulty of scavenging Mg2+(p) could not be explained by particle size.  相似文献   

20.
Size-resolved aerosol particle samples in the size range 0.1–10 μm aerodynamic diameter were collected in the years 2003 and 2004 at an urban background station in Mainz, Germany. Size, morphology, chemical composition and mixing state of more than 5400 individual particles of 7 selected sampling days were analyzed in detail by scanning electron microscopy and energy-dispersive X-ray microanalysis. In addition, transmission electron microscopy, aerosol mass spectrometry and atomic force microscopy were applied to obtain detailed information about the mixing state of the particles. The fine particle fraction (diameter<1 μm) is always dominated by complex secondary aerosol particles (⩾90% by number) independent from air mass origin. These particles are complex internal mixtures of ammonium and sodium sulfates, nitrates, and organic material. Between 20% and 40% of the complex secondary aerosol particles contain soot inclusions. The composition of the coarse particle fraction (>1 μm diameter) is strongly dependant on air mass history with variable abundances of complex secondary aerosol particles, aged sea salt, silicates, silicate mixtures, calcium sulfates, calcium sulfate/carbonate mixtures, calcium nitrate/carbonate mixtures, biological particles, and external soot.The dominance of complex secondary aerosol particles shows that reduction of the precursor gases is a major goal for successful reduction strategies for PM10.  相似文献   

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