Author/Authors :
Zhao، نويسنده , , Jinping and Zhang، نويسنده , , Fuwang and Xu، نويسنده , , Ya and Chen، نويسنده , , Jinsheng، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
The samples of water-soluble inorganic ions (WSIs), including anions (F−, Cl−, SO42−, NO3−) and cations (NH4+, K+, Na+, Ca2+, Mg2+) in 8 size-segregated particle matter (PM), were collected using a sampler (with 8 nominal cut-sizes ranged from 0.43 to 9.0 μm) from October 2008 to September 2009 at five sites in both polluted and background regions of a coastal city, Xiamen. The results showed that particulate matters in the fine mode (PM2.1, Dp < 2.1 μm) comprised large part of mass concentrations of aerosols, which accounted for 45.56–51.27%, 40.04–60.81%, 42.02–60.81%, and 40.46–57.07% of the total particulate mass in spring, summer, autumn, and winter, respectively. The water-soluble ionic species in the fine mode at five sampling sites varied from 15.33 to 33.82 (spring), 14.03 to 28.06 (summer), 33.47 to 72.52 (autumn), and 48.39 to 69.75 μg m− 3 (winter), respectively, which accounted for 57.30 ± 6.51% of the PM2.1 mass concentrations. Secondary pollutants of NH4+, SO42− and NO3− were the dominant contributors of WSIs, which suggested that pollutants from anthropogenic activities, such as SO2, NOx were formed in aerosols by photochemical reactions. The size distributions of Na+, Cl−, SO42− and NO3− were bimodal, peaking at 0.43–0.65 μm and 3.3–5.8 μm. Although some ions, such as NH4+ presented bimodal distributions, the coarse mode was insignificant compared to the fine mode. Ca2+ and Mg2+ exhibited unimodal distributions at all sampling sites, peaking at 2.1–3.3 μm, while K+ having a bimodal distributions with a major peak at 0.43–0.65 μm and a minor one at 3.3–4.7 μm, were used in most of samples. Seasonal and spatial variations in the size-distribution profiles suggested that meteorological conditions (seasonal patterns) and sampling locations (geographical patterns) were the main factors determining the formation of secondary aerosols and characteristics of size distributions for WSIs.
Keywords :
Water-soluble inorganic ions , Distribution modes , Size-segregated particle , Secondary aerosols