Optical properties and chemical composition of aerosol particles at an urban location: An estimation of the aerosol mass scattering and absorption efficiencies
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Titos, Gloria; Foyo-Moreno, Inmaculada; Lyamani, Hassan; Querol, X.; Alastuey, A.; Alados-Arboledas, LucasEditorial
American Geophysical Union
Date
2012-02-22Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry of Science and Technology through projects CGL2008-01330-E/ CLI (Spanish Lidar Network), CGL2010–18782 and CSD2007–00067; Andalusian Regional Government through projects P10-RNM-6299 and P08-RNM-3568Résumé
We investigated aerosol optical properties, mass concentration and chemical
composition over a 1 year period (from March 2006 to February 2007) at an urban site
in Southern Spain (Granada, 37.18°N, 3.58°W, 680 m above sea level). Light-scattering
and absorption measurements were performed using an integrating nephelometer and a
MultiAngle Absorption Photometer (MAAP), respectively, with no aerosol size cut-off
and without any conditioning of the sampled air. PM10 and PM1 (ambient air levels of
atmospheric particulate matter finer than 10 and 1 microns) were collected with two
high volume samplers, and the chemical composition was investigated for all samples.
Relative humidity (RH) within the nephelometer was below 50% and the weighting of the
filters was also at RH of 50%. PM10 and PM1 mass concentrations showed a mean value of
44 19 mg/m3 and 15 7 mg/m3, respectively. The mineral matter was the major
constituent of the PM10–1 fraction (contributing more than 58%) whereas organic matter
and elemental carbon (OM+EC) contributed the most to the PM1 fraction (around 43%).
The absorption coefficient at 550 nm showed a mean value of 24 9 Mm 1 and the
scattering coefficient at 550 nm presented a mean value of 61 25 Mm 1, typical of urban
areas. Both the scattering and the absorption coefficients exhibited the highest values
during winter and the lowest during summer, due to the increase in the anthropogenic
contribution and the lower development of the convective mixing layer during winter.
A very low mean value of the single scattering albedo of 0.71 0.07 at 550 nm was
calculated, suggesting that urban aerosols in this site contain a large fraction of absorbing
material. Mass scattering and absorption efficiencies of PM10 particles exhibited larger
values during winter and lower during summer, showing a similar trend to PM1 and
opposite to PM10–1. This seasonality is therefore influenced by the variations on PM
composition. In addition, the mass scattering efficiency of the major aerosol constituents
in PM10 were also calculated applying the multilinear regression (MLR) analysis. Among
all of them, the most efficient in terms of scattering was sulfate ion (7 1 m2g 1) while
the least efficient was the mineral matter (0.2 0.3 m2g 1). On the other hand,
we found that the absorption process was mainly dominated by carbonaceous particles.