Understanding atmospheric aerosol particles with improved particle identification and quantification by single-particle mass spectrometry
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Published:2019-04-10
Issue:4
Volume:12
Page:2219-2240
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ISSN:1867-8548
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Container-title:Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Meas. Tech.
Author:
Shen Xiaoli, Saathoff Harald, Huang WeiORCID, Mohr ClaudiaORCID, Ramisetty Ramakrishna, Leisner Thomas
Abstract
Abstract. Single-particle mass spectrometry (SPMS) is a widely used tool to determine
chemical composition and mixing state of aerosol particles in the atmosphere.
During a 6-week field campaign in summer 2016 at a rural site in the upper
Rhine valley, near the city of Karlsruhe in southwest Germany, ∼3.7×105 single particles were analysed using a laser ablation aerosol
particle time-of-flight mass spectrometer (LAAPTOF). Combining fuzzy
classification, marker peaks, typical peak ratios, and laboratory-based
reference spectra, seven major particle classes were identified. With the
precise particle identification and well-characterized laboratory-derived
overall detection efficiency (ODE) for this instrument, particle similarity
can be transferred into corrected number and mass fractions without the need
of a reference instrument in the field. Considering the entire measurement
period, aged-biomass-burning and soil-dust-like particles dominated the particle number
(45.0 % number fraction) and mass (31.8 % mass fraction);
sodium-salt-like particles were the second lowest in number (3.4 %) but
the second dominating class in terms of particle mass (30.1 %). This
difference demonstrates the crucial role of particle number counts'
correction for mass quantification using SPMS data. Using corrections for
size-resolved and chemically resolved ODE, the total mass of the particles
measured by LAAPTOF accounts for 23 %–68 % of the total mass
measured by an aerosol mass spectrometer (AMS) depending on the measurement
periods. These two mass spectrometers show a good correlation
(Pearson's correlation coefficient γ>0.6) regarding total mass for more than 85 % of the measurement time,
indicating non-refractory species measured by AMS may originate from
particles consisting of internally mixed non-refractory and refractory
components. In addition, specific relationships of LAAPTOF ion intensities
and AMS mass concentrations for non-refractory compounds were found for
specific measurement periods, especially for the fraction of
org ∕ (org + nitrate). Furthermore, our approach allows the
non-refractory compounds measured by AMS to be assigned to different particle
classes. Overall AMS nitrate mainly arose from sodium-salt-like particles,
while aged-biomass-burning particles were dominant during events with high
organic aerosol particle concentrations.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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