Title of article :
Source apportionment of urban fine and ultra-fine particle number concentration in a Western Mediterranean city
Author/Authors :
Pey، نويسنده , , Jorge and Querol، نويسنده , , Xavier and Alastuey، نويسنده , , Andrés and Rodrيguez، نويسنده , , Sergio and Putaud، نويسنده , , Jean Philippe and Van Dingenen، نويسنده , , Rita، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages :
9
From page :
4407
To page :
4415
Abstract :
Extensive measurements on particle number concentration and size distribution (13–800 nm), together with detailed chemical composition of PM2.5 have constituted the main inputs of the database used for a source apportionment analysis. Data were collected at an urban background site in Barcelona, Western Mediterranean. urce identification analysis helped us to distinguish five emission sources (vehicle exhausts, mineral dust, sea spray, industrial source and fuel-oil combustion) and two atmospheric processes (photochemical induced nucleation and regional/urban background particles derived from coagulation and condensation processes). After that, a multilinear regression analysis was applied in order to quantify the contribution of each factor. tudy reveals that vehicle exhausts contribute dominantly to the number concentration in all the particle sizes (52–86%), but especially in the range 30–200 nm. This work also points out the importance of the regional and/or urban formed aerosols (secondary inorganic particles) on the total number concentration (around 25% of the total number), with a higher impact on the accumulation mode. The photo-chemically induced nucleation of aerosols only represents a small proportion of the total number as an annual mean (3%), but is very relevant when considering only the nucleation mode (13–20 nm) fraction (23%). The other sources recognized registered sporadic contributions to the total number, coinciding with specific meteorological scenarios. tudy discloses the main sources and features affecting and controlling the fine and ultra-fine aerosols in a typical city in the Western Mediterranean coast. Whereas the road traffic appears to be the most important source of sub-micrometric aerosols, other sources may not be negligible under specific meteorological conditions.
Keywords :
Regional/urban background , Chemical composition , Atmospheric processes , Barcelona , Photochemical nucleation , Road Traffic
Journal title :
Atmospheric Environment
Serial Year :
2009
Journal title :
Atmospheric Environment
Record number :
2235398
Link To Document :
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