Characterization of Urban Particulate Air Pollution over

Post on 03-Feb-2022

6 views 0 download

Transcript of Characterization of Urban Particulate Air Pollution over

Characterization of Urban Particulate Air Pollution over

Metropolitan Newark in New Jersey

on the US East Coast

Yuan Gao, Lily Xia, Dawn Roberts-Semple, Rafael Jusino-Astresino, Chris Thuman,

Lu Wang, Nathi Kijpatanasilp

Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences

Rutgers University

Newark, New Jersey USA

.

Objectives:

• To characterize mass-size distributions of ambient aerosol

particles in the polluted urban environment

•To investigate the interactions of chemical species

•To explore the impact of air pollution on biogeochemistry

Methodology:

•Micro-Orifice Uniform Deposit Impactor (MOUDI)

•Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICPMS)

•Scanning electron microscope (SEM)

•Ion chromatography (IC)

Newark

Air Measurement Sites

Atlantic ocean

Long Islan

d

New York City

0

10

20

30

40

0.01 0.1 1 10 100

Dp (µm)

dC

/dlo

g(d

Dp)

(µm

m-3

)3)

7/13-7/14

7/24-7/27

8/15-8/18

8/18-8/21

8/21-8/24

8/24-8/27

9/6-9/9

9/9-9/12

9/20-9/22

9/25-9/27

10/12-10/16

12/14-12/18

(Zhao and Gao, Atmospheric Environment, 2008)

Aerosol Mass Size Distributions: Unban Newark

2006

(Xia and Gao, Marine Chemistry, 2010)

Mass Size Distributions at Coastal Site

2009

Mass Size Distributions at High-Traffic Site

Size Distributions: Selected Trace

Elements

Vanadium

Nickle

Size Distributions: Water-Soluble Inorganic and Organic Species

Sulfate and oxalate:

- Dominant peaks are in

submicron meter size ranges

for both,

- positively correlated,

- Consistent with Yu et al,

(2005).

- Both can come from

pollution emissions.

- Both may play important

roles in dust geochemistry;

dust is a source of Fe, a

limiting nutrient in open

ocea.

Evidence of interactions of

soil particles with acific air

pollutants.

(Gao and Anderson,

JGR-Atmospheres, 2001)

Hematite Dissolution in Oxalate Solutions

Dissolution Time (hours)

0 10 20 30 40 50 60

0

2

4

6

8

10

In 25µM oxalate

In background eletrolyte

)b

0 10 20 30 40 50 60

Dis

solv

ed iro

n a

mount

( µm

ol g-1

)

0

2

4

6

8

10Coated with 25mM oxalate

Non-coated )a

pH = 2.4 ± 0.1(Xu and Gao, Applied Geochemistry, 2008)

H+

Inner sphere

coordinated oxygen

Oxygen

C

Molecular structure of inner-sphere surface complexation of Fe(III)-oxalate

Hem

ati

te

So

luti

on

HO – C = O

HO – C = O

Fe

Fe

Implementation of the field/laboratory results from air

pollution studies into global models to gain better

understanding of biogeochemical cycles:

“Aeolian Iron Mobilization by Dust-Acids Interactions and

Its Implication for Soluble Iron Deposition to the Ocean: A

Test Involving Potential Anthropogenic Organic Acidic

Species”

(Luo and Gao, Environmental Chemistry, 2010)

Conclusions:

1. Ambient particulate mass in this region is

dominated by submicron meter particles, likely

formed through heterogeneous reactions,

2. Particulate matter is highly enriched with

chemical elements of non-crustal source,

indicating the level of air pollution,

3. Acidic air pollutants may interact with dust and

then iron, affecting global biogeochemical cycles.

Thank You.Thank You.Thank You.Thank You.