The mineral aerosol and its impact on urban pollution aerosols over Beijing, China

Han, L; Zhuang, G; Cheng, S; Li, J

HERO ID

137139

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2007

HERO ID 137139
In Press No
Year 2007
Title The mineral aerosol and its impact on urban pollution aerosols over Beijing, China
Authors Han, L; Zhuang, G; Cheng, S; Li, J
Journal Atmospheric Environment
Volume 41
Issue 35
Page Numbers 7533-7546
Abstract A campaign of sampling total suspended particles (TSP) and fine particles (PM(2.5)) in Beijing from 2001 to 2004 were carried out to investigate the mineral aerosol and its impact on urban pollution aerosols, mainly sulfate, nitrate, and ammonium. In urban Beijing, mineral aerosol accounted for 32-67% of TSP, 10-70% of PM(2.5) in normal four seasons, and as high as 74% of TSP and 90% of PM(2.5) in dust storm period. The sources from outside Beijing accounted for 62% of the total mineral aerosols in TSP, and 76% in PM(2.5) in spring, 69% and 45% in TSP and PM(2.5), respectively, in winter, similar to 20% of both TSP and PM2.5 in summer and autumn; and it reached as high as 97% of TSP in dust storm days. Mineral aerosol has an important positive influence on formations of sulfate, nitrate, and ammonium, as there was a positive correlation between sulfate/nitrate/ammonium and mineral aerosol under appropriate meteorological conditions. Sulfate, and ammonium mainly existed in fine particles, PM(2.5), Sulfate might mostly derive from the formation on the pathways of the long-range transport by the reactions of their precursors SO(2) on the surfaces of dust particles, while nitrate was mostly derived by the homogeneous reaction and the neutralization of their precursors NO(2) on surfaces of mineral aerosol. Nitrate and ammonium mostly derived from the local pollution sources. (C) 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Doi 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2007.05.046
Wosid WOS:000251829300013
Url http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S1352231007004918
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments Source: Web of Science WOS:000251829300013
Is Public Yes
Keyword mineral aerosol; urban pollution aerosol; sulfate; nitrate; ammonium
Is Qa No