4.5 Article

Effect of aqueous-phase processing on aerosol chemistry and size distributions in Fresno, California, during wintertime

期刊

ENVIRONMENTAL CHEMISTRY
卷 9, 期 3, 页码 221-235

出版社

CSIRO PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1071/EN11168

关键词

Aerodyne high-resolution time-of-flight aerosol mass spectrometer (HR-ToF-AMS); aqueous-phase reaction; fog/cloud processing; SOA production; submicrometre aerosol chemistry

资金

  1. San Joaquin Valley Aerosol Health Effects Research Center (SAHERC)
  2. United States Environmental Protection Agency [RD-83241401-0]
  3. USA EPA
  4. Office of Science (BER), USA Department of Energy [DEFG02-08ER64627, DESC0002191]
  5. California Agricultural Experiment Station [CA-D-ETX-2102-H]
  6. UC Davis Atmospheric Aerosol Health (AAH)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Submicrometre aerosols (PM1) were characterised in situ with a high resolution time-of-flight aerosol mass spectrometer and a scanning mobility particle sizer in Fresno, CA, from 9 to 23 January 2010. Three dense fog events occurred during the first week of the campaign whereas the last week was influenced by frequent rain events. We thus studied the effects of aqueous-phase processing on aerosol properties by examining the temporal variations of submicrometre aerosol composition and size distributions. Rains removed secondary species effectively, leading to low loadings of PM1 dominated by primary organic species. Fog episodes, however, increased the concentrations of secondary aerosol species (sulfate, nitrate, ammonium and oxygenated organic aerosol). The size distributions of these secondary species, which always showed a droplet mode peaking at similar to 500 nm in the vacuum aerodynamic diameter, increased in mode size during fog episodes as well. In addition, the oxygen-to-carbon ratio of oxygenated organic species increased in foggy days, indicating that fog processing likely enhances the production of secondary organic aerosol as well as its oxidation degree. Overall, our observations show that aqueous-phase processes significantly affect submicrometre aerosol chemistry and microphysics in the Central Valley of California during winter, responsible for the production of secondary inorganic and organic aerosol species and the formation of droplet mode particles, thus altering the climatic and health effects of ambient aerosols in this region.

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