First insights into northern Africa high-altitude background aerosol chemical composition and source influences
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Published:2021-12-15
Issue:24
Volume:21
Page:18147-18174
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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:
Deabji Nabil, Fomba Khanneh Wadinga, El Hajjaji SouadORCID, Mellouki Abdelwahid, Poulain LaurentORCID, Zeppenfeld Sebastian, Herrmann HartmutORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Field measurements were conducted to determine aerosol chemical
composition at a newly established remote high-altitude site in North
Africa at the Atlas Mohammed V (AMV) atmospheric observatory located in the
Middle Atlas Mountains. The main objectives of the present work are to
investigate the variations in the aerosol composition and better assess
global and regional changes in atmospheric composition in North Africa. A
total of 200 particulate matter (PM10) filter samples were collected at the site using a high-volume (HV) collector in a 12 h sampling interval from August to December 2017. The chemical composition of the samples was analyzed for trace metals, water-soluble ions, organic carbon (OC/EC), aliphatic hydrocarbons, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) contents. The results indicate that high-altitude aerosol composition is influenced
by both regional and transregional transport of emissions. However,
local sources play an important role, especially during low wind speed
periods, as observed for November and December. During background conditions characterized by low wind speeds (avg. 3 m s−1) and mass concentrations in the range from 9.8 to 12 µg m−3, the
chemical composition is found to be dominated by inorganic elements, mainly
suspended dust (61 %) and ionic species (7 %), followed by organic
matter (7 %), water content (12 %), and unidentified mass (11 %).
Despite the proximity of the site to the Sahara, its influence on the atmospheric composition at this high-altitude site was mainly seasonal and accounted for only 22 % of the sampling duration. Biogenic organics
contributed up to 7 % of the organic matter with high contributions from compounds such as heneicosane, hentriacontane, and nonacosane. The AMV site is dominated by four main air mass inflows, which often leads to different aerosol chemical compositions. Mineral dust influence was seasonal and ranged between 21 % and 74 % of the PM mass, with peaks observed during the summer, and was accompanied by high concentrations of SO42- of up to 3.0 µg m−3. During winter, PM10 concentrations are low (<30 µg m−3),
the influence of the desert is weaker, and the marine air masses (64 %)
are more dominant with a mixture of sea salt and polluted aerosol from the
coastal regions (Rabat and Casablanca). During the daytime, mineral dust
contribution to PM increased by about 42 % because of road dust
resuspension. In contrast, during nighttime, an increase in the
concentrations of alkanes, PAHs, alkane-2-ones, and anthropogenic metals
such as Pb, Ni, and Cu was found due to variations in the boundary layer
height. The results provide the first detailed seasonal and diurnal
variation of the aerosol chemical composition, which is valuable for long-term
assessment of climate and regional influence of air pollution in North
Africa.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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