Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (Mar 2011)

Photochemical processing of organic aerosol at nearby continental sites: contrast between urban plumes and regional aerosol

  • J. G. Slowik,
  • J. Brook,
  • R. Y.-W. Chang,
  • G. J. Evans,
  • K. Hayden,
  • C.-H. Jeong,
  • S.-M. Li,
  • J. Liggio,
  • P. S. K. Liu,
  • M. McGuire,
  • C. Mihele,
  • S. Sjostedt,
  • A. Vlasenko,
  • J. P. D. Abbatt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-11-2991-2011
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 6
pp. 2991 – 3006

Abstract

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As part of the BAQS-Met 2007 field campaign, Aerodyne time-of-flight aerosol mass spectrometers (ToF-AMS) were deployed at two sites in southwestern Ontario from 17 June to 11 July 2007. One instrument was located at Harrow, ON, a rural, agriculture-dominated area approximately 40 km southeast of the Detroit/Windsor/Windsor urban area and 5 km north of Lake Erie. The second instrument was located at Bear Creek, ON, a rural site approximately 70 km northeast of the Harrow site and 50 km east of Detroit/Windsor. Positive matrix factorization analysis of the combined organic mass spectral dataset yields factors related to secondary organic aerosol (SOA), direct emissions, and a factor tentatively attributed to the reactive uptake of isoprene and/or condensation of its early generation reaction products. This is the first application of PMF to simultaneous AMS measurements at different sites, an approach which allows for self-consistent, direct comparison of the datasets. Case studies are utilized to investigate processing of SOA from (1) fresh emissions from Detroit/Windsor and (2) regional aerosol during periods of inter-site flow. A strong correlation is observed between SOA/excess CO and photochemical age as represented by the NO<sub>x</sub>/NO<sub>y</sub> ratio for Detroit/Windsor outflow. Although this correlation is not evident for more aged air, measurements at the two sites during inter-site transport nevertheless show evidence of continued atmospheric processing by SOA production. However, the rate of SOA production decreases with airmass age from an initial value of ~10.1 μg m<sup>−3</sup> ppmv<sub>CO</sub><sup>&minus;1</sup> h<sup>&minus;1</sup> for the first ~10 h of plume processing to near-zero in an aged airmass (i.e. after several days). The initial SOA production rate is comparable to the observed rate in Mexico City over similar timescales.