Characterization of carbonaceous aerosols in Singapore: insight from black carbon fragments and trace metal ions detected by a soot particle aerosol mass spectrometer
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Published:2020-05-20
Issue:10
Volume:20
Page:5977-5993
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Rivellini Laura-Hélèna,Adam Max Gerrit,Kasthuriarachchi Nethmi,Lee Alex King Yin
Abstract
Abstract. Understanding sources and atmospheric processes that can influence
the physiochemical properties of carbonaceous aerosols is essential to
evaluate their impacts on air quality and climate. However, resolving the
sources, emission characteristics, and aging processes of carbonaceous
aerosols in complex urban environments remains challenging. In this work, a
soot particle aerosol mass spectrometer (SP-AMS) was deployed to
characterize organic aerosols (OAs), refractory black carbon (rBC), and trace metals in
Singapore, a highly urbanized city with multiple local and regional air
pollution sources in the tropical region. rBC (C1+–C9+)
fragments and trace metal ions (K+, Na+, Ni+, V+, and
Rb+) were integrated into our positive matrix factorization of OA. Two
types of fossil fuel combustion-related OAs with different degrees of
oxygenation were identified. This work provides evidence that over 90 % of
rBC originated from local combustion sources with a major part related
to traffic and ∼30 % associated with fresh
secondary organic aerosol (SOA) produced under the influence of shipping
and industrial emission activities (e.g., refineries and petrochemical
plants) during daytime. The results also show that ∼43 % of
the total rBC was emitted from local traffic, while the rest of the rBC fraction
stemmed from multiple sources including vehicular sources, shipping, and industrial
emissions, but was not fully resolved. There was only a weak association
of the cooking-related OA component with rBC. Although there was no
observable biomass burning episode during the sampling period, K+ and
Rb+ were mainly associated with the more oxidized oxygenated OA
component, indicating the potential contribution of regional biomass burning
and/or coal combustion emissions to this aged OA component. Furthermore, the
aerosol pollutants transported from the industrial area and shipping ports
presented higher C1+/C3+ and V+/Ni+ ratios than
those associated with traffic. The observed association between Na+ and
rBC suggests that the contribution of anthropogenic emissions to total
particulate sodium should not be ignored in coastal urban environments.
Overall, this work demonstrates that rBC fragments and trace metal ions can
improve our understanding of the sources, emission characteristics, and
aging history of carbonaceous aerosol (OA and rBC) in this type of complex
urban environment.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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