Long-range and local air pollution: What can we learn from chemical speciation of particulate matter at paired sites?

Here we report results of a detailed analysis of the urban and non-urban contributions to particulate matter (PM) concentrations and source contributions in five European cities, namely Schiedam (the Netherlands, NL), Lens (France, FR), Leipzig (Germany, DE), Zurich (Switzerland, CH) and Barcelona (Spain, ES). PM chemically speciated data from 12 European paired monitoring sites (one traffic, five urban, five regional and one continental background) were analysed by positive matrix factorisation (PMF) and Lenschow's approach to assign measured PM and source contributions to the different spati... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Pandolfi, Marco
Mooibroek, Dennis
Hopke, Philip
van Pinxteren, Dominik
Querol, Xavier
Herrmann, Hartmut
Alastuey, Andrés
Favez, Olivier
Hüglin, Christoph
Perdrix, Esperanza
Riffault, Véronique
Sauvage, Stéphane
van der Swaluw, Eric
Tarasova, Oksana
Colette, Augustin
Dokumenttyp: status-type:publishedVersion
Erscheinungsdatum: 2020
Verlag/Hrsg.: Katlenburg-Lindau : EGU
Schlagwörter: atmospheric pollution / concentration (composition) / long range transport / matrix / particulate matter / pollutant source / pollution monitoring / speciation (chemistry) / urban atmosphere / Barcelona [Barcelona (PRV)] / Barcelona [Catalonia] / Catalonia / France / Germany / Leipzig / Netherlands / Saxony / Spain / Switzerland / Zurich [Switzerland] / Zurich [Zurich (ADS)] / ddc:550
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27205087
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://oa.tib.eu/renate/handle/123456789/6967

Here we report results of a detailed analysis of the urban and non-urban contributions to particulate matter (PM) concentrations and source contributions in five European cities, namely Schiedam (the Netherlands, NL), Lens (France, FR), Leipzig (Germany, DE), Zurich (Switzerland, CH) and Barcelona (Spain, ES). PM chemically speciated data from 12 European paired monitoring sites (one traffic, five urban, five regional and one continental background) were analysed by positive matrix factorisation (PMF) and Lenschow's approach to assign measured PM and source contributions to the different spatial levels. Five common sources were obtained at the 12 sites: sulfate-rich (SSA) and nitrate-rich (NSA) aerosols, road traffic (RT), mineral matter (MM), and aged sea salt (SS). These sources explained from 55 % to 88 % of PM mass at urban low-traffic-impact sites (UB) depending on the country. Three additional common sources were identified at a subset of sites/countries, namely biomass burning (BB) (FR, CH and DE), explaining an additional 9 %-13 % of PM mass, and residual oil combustion (V-Ni) and primary industrial (IND) (NL and ES), together explaining an additional 11 %-15 % of PM mass. In all countries, the majority of PM measured at UB sites was of a regional+continental (R+C) nature (64 %-74 %). The R+C PM increments due to anthropogenic emissions in DE, NL, CH, ES and FR represented around 66 %, 62 %, 52 %, 32 % and 23 %, respectively, of UB PM mass. Overall, the R+C PM increments due to natural and anthropogenic sources showed opposite seasonal profiles with the former increasing in summer and the latter increasing in winter, even if exceptions were observed. In ES, the anthropogenic R+C PM increment was higher in summer due to high contributions from regional SSA and V-Ni sources, both being mostly related to maritime shipping emissions at the Spanish sites. Conversely, in the other countries, higher anthropogenic R+C PM increments in winter were mostly due to high contributions from NSA and BB regional sources ...