Diurnal source apportionment of organic and inorganic atmospheric particulate matter at a high-altitude mountain site under summer conditions (Sierra Nevada; Spain)
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Jaén, Clara; Titos Vela, Gloria; Castillo Fernández, Sonia; Casans Gabasa, Andrea; Rejano Martínez, Fernando; Cazorla Cabrera, Alberto; Herrero, Javier; Alados Arboledas, LucasEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Air pollution High-mountain Particulate matter Organic PM Inorganic PM Source apportionment
Date
2023-12-20Referencia bibliográfica
C. Jaén et al. Diurnal source apportionment of organic and inorganic atmospheric particulate matter at a high-altitude mountain site under summer conditions (Sierra Nevada; Spain). Science of the Total Environment 905 (2023) 167178. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.167178]
Patrocinador
CuanTox CTM2015-71832-P; Intempol PGC2018-102288-B-I00; MCIN/AEI RTI2018.101154.A.I00, PID2021-128757OB-I00; Marie Curie Actions; European Union (EU); European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program through project ACTRIS.IMP 871115; ATMO_ACCESS 101008004; Spanish Government PID2020-120015RB-I00; ACTRIS-España RED2022-134824-E; Junta de Andalucia P20-00136; AEROPRE P-18-RT -3820; University of Granada Plan Propio LS2022-1; Scientific Units of Excellence Program UCE-PP2017-02; Severo Ochoa Centre of Research Excellence (Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation) CEX2018-000794-S; Generalitat de Catalunya 2021SGR00986; Spanish Government FPU 19/06826Résumé
High-altitude mountain areas are sentinel ecosystems for global environmental changes such as anthropogenic pollution. In this study, we report a source apportionment of particulate material with an aerodynamic diameter smaller than 10 μm (PM10) in a high-altitude site in southern Europe (Sierra Nevada Station; SNS (2500 m a.s.l.)) during summer 2021. The emission sources and atmospheric secondary processes that determine the composition of aerosol particles in Sierra Nevada National Park (Spain) are identified from the concentrations of organic carbon (OC), elemental carbon (EC), 12 major inorganic compounds, 18 trace elements and 44 organic molecular tracer compounds in PM10 filter samples collected during day- and nighttime. The multivariate analysis of the joint dataset resolved five main PM10 sources: 1) Saharan dust, 2) advection from the urbanized valley, 3) local combustion, 4) smoke from a fire-event, and 5) aerosol from regional recirculation with high contribution of particles from secondary inorganic and organic aerosol formation processes. PM sources were clearly associated with synoptic meteorological conditions, and day- and nighttime circulation patterns typical of mountainous areas. Although a local pollution source was identified, the contribution of this source to PM10, OC and EC was small. Our results evidence the strong influence of middle- and long-range transport of aerosols, mainly from anthropogenic origin, on the aerosol chemical composition at this remote site.