Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (Apr 2013)

Hourly elemental concentrations in PM<sub>2.5</sub> aerosols sampled simultaneously at urban background and road site during SAPUSS – diurnal variations and PMF receptor modelling

  • M. Dall'Osto,
  • X. Querol,
  • F. Amato,
  • A. Karanasiou,
  • F. Lucarelli,
  • S. Nava,
  • G. Calzolai,
  • M. Chiari

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-13-4375-2013
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 8
pp. 4375 – 4392

Abstract

Read online

Hourly-resolved aerosol chemical speciation data can be a highly powerful tool to determine the source origin of atmospheric pollutants in urban environments. Aerosol mass concentrations of seventeen elements (Na, Mg, Al, S, Cl, K, Ca, Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Ni, Cu, Zn, Sr and Pb) were obtained by time (1 h) and size (PM2.5 particulate matter 2.5 mass fraction simultaneously measured at the UB and RS sites: (1) the regional aerosol sources impact both monitoring sites at similar concentrations regardless their different ventilation conditions; (2) by contrast, local industrial aerosol plumes associated with shipping oil combustion and smelters activities have a higher impact on the more ventilated UB site; (3) a unique source of Pb-Cl (associated with combustion emissions) is found to be the major (82%) source of fine Cl in the urban agglomerate; (4) the mean diurnal variation of PM2.5 primary traffic non-exhaust brake dust (Fe-Cu) suggests that this source is mainly emitted and not resuspended, whereas PM2.5 urban dust (Ca) is found mainly resuspended by both traffic vortex and sea breeze; (5) urban dust (Ca) is found the aerosol source most affected by land wetness, reduced by a factor of eight during rainy days and suggesting that wet roads may be a solution for reducing urban dust concentrations.