Urban aerosol chemistry at a land–water transition site during summer – Part 2: Aerosol pH and liquid water content
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Published:2021-12-16
Issue:24
Volume:21
Page:18271-18281
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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:
Battaglia Jr. Michael A., Balasus Nicholas, Ball Katherine, Caicedo Vanessa, Delgado RubenORCID, Carlton Annmarie G.ORCID, Hennigan Christopher J.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Particle acidity (aerosol pH) is an important driver of atmospheric chemical processes and the resulting effects on human and environmental
health. Understanding the factors that control aerosol pH is critical when enacting control strategies targeting specific outcomes. This study
characterizes aerosol pH at a land–water transition site near Baltimore, MD, during summer 2018 as part of the second Ozone Water-Land Environmental
Transition Study (OWLETS-2) field campaign. Inorganic fine-mode aerosol composition, gas-phase NH3 measurements, and all relevant
meteorological parameters were used to characterize the effects of temperature, aerosol liquid water (ALW), and composition on predictions of
aerosol pH. Temperature, the factor linked to the control of NH3 partitioning, was found to have the most significant effect on aerosol pH
during OWLETS-2. Overall, pH varied with temperature at a rate of −0.047 K−1 across all observations, though the sensitivity was
−0.085 K−1 for temperatures > 293 K. ALW had a minor effect on pH, except at the lowest ALW levels
(< 1 µg m−3), which caused a significant increase in aerosol acidity (decrease in pH). Aerosol pH was generally insensitive to
composition (SO42-, SO42-:NH4+, total NH3 (Tot-NH3) = NH3 + NH4+), consistent
with recent studies in other locations. In a companion paper, the sources of episodic NH3 events (95th percentile concentrations,
NH3 > 7.96 µg m−3) during the study are analyzed; aerosol pH was higher by only ∼ 0.1–0.2 pH units
during these events compared to the study mean. A case study was analyzed to characterize the response of aerosol pH to nonvolatile cations (NVCs)
during a period strongly influenced by primary Chesapeake Bay emissions. Depending on the method used, aerosol pH was estimated to be either weakly
(∼ 0.1 pH unit change based on NH3 partitioning calculation) or strongly (∼ 1.4 pH unit change based on
ISORROPIA thermodynamic model predictions) affected by NVCs. The case study suggests a strong pH gradient with size during the event and underscores the need to evaluate assumptions of aerosol mixing state applied to pH calculations. Unique features of this study, including the urban land–water transition site and the strong influence of NH3 emissions from both agricultural and industrial sources, add to the understanding of aerosol pH and its controlling factors in diverse
environments.
Funder
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration National Science Foundation
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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