Highly time-resolved measurements of element concentrations in PM<sub>10</sub> and PM<sub>2.5</sub>: comparison of Delhi, Beijing, London, and Krakow
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Published:2021-01-19
Issue:2
Volume:21
Page:717-730
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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:
Rai PragatiORCID, Slowik Jay G., Furger MarkusORCID, El Haddad Imad, Visser Suzanne, Tong Yandong, Singh AtinderpalORCID, Wehrle Günther, Kumar Varun, Tobler Anna K.ORCID, Bhattu Deepika, Wang LiweiORCID, Ganguly DilipORCID, Rastogi NeerajORCID, Huang Ru-Jin, Necki Jaroslaw, Cao Junji, Tripathi Sachchida N., Baltensperger Urs, Prévôt André S. H.
Abstract
Abstract. We present highly time-resolved (30 to 120 min)
measurements of size-fractionated (PM10 and PM2.5) elements in two
cities in Asia (Delhi and Beijing) and Europe (Krakow and London). For most
elements, the mean concentrations in PM10 and PM2.5 are higher in
the Asian cities (up to 24 and 28 times, respectively) than in Krakow and
often higher in Delhi than in Beijing. Among European cities, Krakow shows
higher elemental concentrations (up to 20 and 27 times, respectively) than
London. Hourly maximum concentrations of Pb and Zn reach up to 1 µg m−3 in Delhi, substantially higher than at the other sites. The
enrichment factor of an element together with the size distribution allows
for a rough classification of elements by major source. We define five
groups: (1) dust emissions, (2) non-exhaust traffic emissions, (3) solid fuel
combustion, (4) mixed traffic/industrial emissions, and (5)
industrial/coal/waste burning emissions, with the last group exhibiting the
most site-to-site variability. We demonstrate that the high time resolution
and size-segregated elemental dataset can be a powerful tool to assess
aerosol composition and sources in urban environments. Our results highlight
the need to consider the size distributions of toxic elements, diurnal
patterns of targeted emissions, and local vs. regional effects in
formulating effective environmental policies to protect public health.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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