Chemical characterisation of atmospheric aerosols during a 2007 summer field campaign at Brasschaat, Belgium : sources and source processes of biogenic secondary organic aerosol

Measurements of organic marker compounds and inorganic species were performed on PM2.5 aerosols from a Belgian forest site that is severely impacted by urban pollution ("De Inslag", Brasschaat, Belgium) during a 2007 summer period within the framework of the "Formation mechanisms, marker compounds, and source apportionment for biogenic atmospheric aerosols (BIOSOL)" project. The measured organic species included (i) low-molecular weight (MW) dicarboxylic acids (LMW DCAs), (ii) methanesulfonate (MSA), (iii) terpenoic acids originating from the oxidation of alpha-pinene, beta-pinene, d-limonene... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Gomez-Gonzalez, Y
Wang, Wan
Vermeylen, R
Chi, Xuguang
Neirynck, J
Janssens, IA
Maenhaut, Willy
Claeys, M
Dokumenttyp: journalarticle
Erscheinungsdatum: 2012
Schlagwörter: Earth and Environmental Sciences / PINENE OXIDATION-PRODUCTS / BOREAL FOREST AEROSOLS / BETA-PINENE / GAS-PHASE / DICARBOXYLIC-ACIDS / PARTICULATE PRODUCTS / MASS-SPECTROMETRY / NATURAL SUNLIGHT / DIEL VARIATIONS / ALPHA-PINENE
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26992389
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://biblio.ugent.be/publication/2073769

Measurements of organic marker compounds and inorganic species were performed on PM2.5 aerosols from a Belgian forest site that is severely impacted by urban pollution ("De Inslag", Brasschaat, Belgium) during a 2007 summer period within the framework of the "Formation mechanisms, marker compounds, and source apportionment for biogenic atmospheric aerosols (BIOSOL)" project. The measured organic species included (i) low-molecular weight (MW) dicarboxylic acids (LMW DCAs), (ii) methanesulfonate (MSA), (iii) terpenoic acids originating from the oxidation of alpha-pinene, beta-pinene, d-limonene and Delta(3)-carene, and (iv) organosulfates related to secondary organic aerosol from the oxidation of isoprene and alpha-pinene. The organic tracers explained, on average, 5.3% of the organic carbon (OC), of which 0.7% was due to MSA, 3.4% to LMW DCAs, 0.6% to organosulfates, and 0.6% to terpenoic acids. The highest atmospheric concentrations of most species were observed during the first five days of the campaign, which were characterised by maximum day-time temperatures >22 degrees C. Most of the terpenoic acids and the organosulfates peaked during day-time, consistent with their local photochemical origin. High concentrations of 3-methyl-1,2,3-butanetricarboxylic acid (MBTCA) and low concentrations of cis-pinonic acid were noted during the first five days of the campaign, indicative of an aged biogenic aerosol. Several correlations between organic species were very high (r>0.85), high (0.7<r<0.85), or substantial (0.5<r<0.7), suggesting that they are generated through similar formation pathways. Substantial correlations with temperature were found for OC, water-soluble OC, MBTCA, and several other organic species. MBTCA and terebic acid were highly correlated with the temperature (r>0.7) and showed an Arrhenius-type relationship, consistent with their formation through OH radical chemistry.