Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (Oct 2020)

Characterizing the spatiotemporal nitrogen stable isotopic composition of ammonia in vehicle plumes

  • W. W. Walters,
  • W. W. Walters,
  • L. Song,
  • L. Song,
  • L. Song,
  • J. Chai,
  • J. Chai,
  • Y. Fang,
  • Y. Fang,
  • Y. Fang,
  • N. Colombi,
  • N. Colombi,
  • M. G. Hastings,
  • M. G. Hastings

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-20-11551-2020
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20
pp. 11551 – 11567

Abstract

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Vehicle emissions have been identified as an important urban source of ammonia (NH3). However, there are large uncertainties regarding the contribution of vehicle emissions to urban NH3 budgets, as well as the role of NH3 in spatiotemporal fine particulate matter (PM2.5) formation and nitrogen (N) deposition patterns. The N stable isotopic composition (δ15N) may be a useful observational constraint to track NH3 emission sources and chemical processing, but previously reported vehicle δ15N(NH3) emission signatures have reported a wide range of values, indicating the need for further refinement. Here we have characterized δ15N(NH3) spatiotemporal variabilities from vehicle plumes in stationary and on-road measurements in the USA and China using an active NH3 collection technique demonstrated to accurately characterize δ15N(NH3) on the order of hourly time resolution. Significant spatial and temporal δ15N(NH3) variabilities were observed and suggested to be driven by vehicle fleet composition and influences from NH3 dry deposition on tunnel surfaces. Overall, a consistent δ15N(NH3) signature of 6.6±2.1 ‰ (x‾±1σ; n=80) was found in fresh vehicle plumes with fleet compositions typical of urban regions. Our recommended vehicle δ15N(NH3) signature is significantly different from previous reports. This difference is due to a large and consistent δ15N(NH3) bias of approximately −15.5 ‰ between commonly employed passive NH3 collection techniques and the laboratory-tested active NH3 collection technique. This work constrains the δ15N(NH3) urban traffic plume signature, which has important implications for tracking vehicle NH3 in urban-affected areas and highlights the importance of utilizing verified collection methods for accurately characterizing δ15N(NH3) values.