Source apportionment of fine PM and sub-micron particle number concentrations at a regional background site in the western Mediterranean: A 2.5 year study

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Abstract

The chemical composition and sources of ambient fine particulate matter (PM1) over a period of 2.5 years for a regional background site in the western Mediterranean are presented in this work. Furthermore, sub-micron particle number concentrations and the sources of these particles are also presented. The mean PM1 concentration for the measurement period was 8.9 μgm-3, with organic matter (OM) and sulphate comprising most of the mass (3.2 and 1.5 μgm-3 respectively). Six sources were identified in PM1 by Positive Matrix Factorisation (PMF): secondary organic aerosol, secondary nitrate, industrial, traffic + biomass burning, fuel oil combustion and secondary sulphate. Typically anthropogenic sources displayed elevated concentrations during the week with reductions at weekends. Nitrate levels were elevated in winter and negligible in summer, whereas secondary sulphate levels underwent a contrasting seasonal evolution with highest concentrations in summer, similar to the fuel oil combustion source. The SOA source was influenced by episodes of sustained pollution as a result of anticyclonic conditions occurring during winter, giving rise to thermal inversions and the accumulation of pollutants in the mixing layer. Increased levels in summer were owing to higher biogenic emissions and regional recirculation of air masses. The industrial source decreased in August due to decreased emissions during the vacation period. Increases in the traffic + biomass burning source were recorded in January, April and October, which were attributed to the occurrence of the aforementioned pollution episodes and local biomass burning emission sources, which include agriculture and domestic heating systems. Average particle number concentrations (N9-825 nm) from 5/11/2010 to 01/06/2011 and from 15/10/2011 to 18/12/2011 reached 3097 cm -3. Five emission sources of particle of sub-micron particles were determined by Principal Component Analysis (PCA); industrial + traffic + biomass burning, new particle formation + growth, secondary sulphate + fuel oil combustion, crustal material and secondary nitrate. The new particle formation + growth source dominated the particle number concentration (56% of total particle number concentration), especially for particles < 100 nm, followed by industrial + traffic + biomass burning (13%). Secondary sulphate + fuel oil combustion (8%), nitrate (9%) and crustal material (2%) were dominant for particles of larger diameter (> 100 nm) and thus did not influence the particle number concentration significantly. © Author(s) 2013.

Figures

  • Fig. 1. Chemical composition of PM1 at MSY from 24/09/2009 to 11/01/2012.
  • Fig. 3. Average contribution of each source (µg m−3) to PM1 obtained by PMF.
  • Fig. 2. Source profiles (µg/µg) identified for PM1 measured at MSY. All available PM1 samples (182) were used. The mass of each species apportioned to the factor (blue bar, left axis) and the percent of each species apportioned to each factor (red square, right axis) is shown.
  • Table 1. Mean annual and seasonal concentrations for major components of PM1 at MSY, and sum of concentrations of trace elements (TE), in µg m−3.
  • Fig. 4. Daily contribution of each source to total PM1 mass concentration (µg m−3) and temperature (◦C) for 24/09/2009 to 19/12/2010 (above) and 20/01/2011 to 11/01/2012 (below). Intense winter pollution episodes are marked by black arrows.
  • Fig. 6. Average monthly concentrations (µg m−3) of each source.
  • Fig. 5. Average daily concentrations (µg m−3) of each source.
  • Fig. 7. Time variation of nitrate concentration (µg m−3) and particle number concentration (cm−3) of the nucleation mode (N9−30) for the entire measurement period (above graph) and for a section of the data (below). Red arrows highlight opposing variations in concentrations and blue arrows indicate similar variations in concentrations.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Cusack, M., Pérez, N., Pey, J., Alastuey, A., & Querol, X. (2013). Source apportionment of fine PM and sub-micron particle number concentrations at a regional background site in the western Mediterranean: A 2.5 year study. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 13(10), 5173–5187. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-13-5173-2013

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