Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (Oct 2024)
Measurement report: Urban ammonia and amines in Houston, Texas
Abstract
Ammonia and amines play critical roles in secondary aerosol formation, especially in urban environments. However, fast measurements of ammonia and amines in the atmosphere are very scarce. We measured ammonia and amines with a chemical ionization mass spectrometer (CIMS) at the urban center in Houston, Texas, the fourth most populated urban site in the United States, during October 2022. Ammonia concentrations were on average four parts per billion by volume (ppbv), while the concentration of an individual amine ranged from several parts per trillion by volume (pptv) to hundreds of pptv. These reduced nitrogen compounds were more abundant during weekdays than on weekends and correlated with measured CO concentrations, implying they were mostly emitted from pollutant sources. Both ammonia and amines showed a distinct diurnal cycle, with higher concentrations in the warmer afternoon, indicating dominant gas-to-particle conversion processes taking place with the changing ambient temperatures. Studies have shown that dimethylamine is critical for new particle formation (NPF) in the polluted boundary layer, but currently there are no amine emission inventories in global climate models (as opposed to ammonia). Our observations made in the very polluted area of Houston, as well as a less polluted site (Kent, Ohio) from our previous study (You et al., 2014), indicate there is a consistent ratio of dimethylamine over ammonia at these two sites. Thus, our observations can provide a relatively constrained proxy of dimethylamine using 0.1 % ammonia concentrations at polluted sites in the United States to model NPF processes.