A study on the relationship between mass concentrations, chemistry and number size distribution of urban fine aerosols in Milan, Barcelona and London
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Abstract
A physicochemical characterization, including
aerosol number size distribution, chemical composition and
mass concentrations, of the urban fine aerosol captured in
MILAN, BARCELONA and LONDON is presented in this
article. The objective is to obtain a comprehensive picture
of the microphysical processes involved in aerosol dynamics
during the: 1) regular evolution of the urban aerosol (daily,
weekly and seasonal basis) and in the day-to-day variations
(from clean-air to pollution-events), and 2) the link between
“aerosol chemistry and mass concentrations” with the “number
size distribution”.
The mass concentrations of the fine PM2.5 aerosol exhibit
a high correlation with the number concentration of
>100 nm particles N>100 (nm) (“accumulation mode particles”)
which only account for <20% of the total number
concentration N of fine aerosols; but do not correlate
with the number of <100 nm particles (“ultrafine particles”),
which accounts for >80% of fine particles number concentration.
Organic matter and black-carbon are the only
aerosol components showing a significant correlation with
the ultrafine particles, attributed to vehicles exhausts emissions;
whereas ammonium-nitrate, ammonium-sulphate and
also organic matter and black-carbon correlate with N>100
(nm) and attributed to condensation mechanisms, other par-
ticle growth processes and some primary emissions. Time
series of the aerosol DpN diameter (dN/dlogD mode), mass
PM2.5 concentrations and number N>100 (nm) concentrations
exhibit correlated day-to-day variations, which point
to a significant involvement of condensation of semi-volatile
compounds during urban pollution events. This agrees with
the observation that ammonium-nitrate is the component exhibiting
the highest increases from mid-to-high pollution
episodes, when the highest DpN increases are observed.
The results indicates that “fine PM2.5 particles urban pollution
events” tend to occur when condensation processes
have made particles grow large enough to produce significant
number concentrations of N>100 (nm) (“accumulation
mode particles”). In contrast, because the low contribution
of ultrafine particles to the fine aerosol mass concentrations,
high “ultrafine particles N<100(nm) events” frequently occurs
under low PM2.5 conditions. The results of this study
demonstrate that vehicles exhausts emissions are strongly involved
in this ultrafine particles aerosol pollution.
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Bibliographic citation
Rodríguez González, Sergio; Van Dingenen, R.; Putaud, J.-P.; Dell’Acqua, A., Pey, J., Querol, X., Alastuey Urós, J.A., Chenery, S., Ho, K.-F., Harrison, R., Tardivo, R., Scarnato, B., Gemelli, V. : "A study on the relationship between mass concentrations, chemistry and number size distribution of urban fine aerosols in Milan, Barcelona and London". Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics. Vol. 7, págs. 2217-2232 (2007). ISSN 1680-7324









