Measurements and simulation of speciated PM2.5 in south-west Europe
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Abstract
Chemically speciated concentrations of PM2.5 (sulphate, ammonium, nitrate, elemental and organic
carbon) were simulated in south-west Europe using the three-dimensional air quality model CAMx
driven by the MM5 meteorological model. The inner domain covered the south-west region of Spain with
a high spatial (2 km 2 km) and temporal resolution (1 h). The simulation results were evaluated against
experimental data obtained in four intensive field campaigns performed in 2008 and 2009 at urban and
rural sites. PM2.5 measurements of secondary inorganic compounds and carbonaceous aerosol plus a
suite of major and trace elements were determined. High time resolution (10 min) measurements of
Black Carbon (BC) were also conducted. The model captured the variability in the ammonium concentrations
in both summer and winter periods, although it tended to underestimate the magnitude of
concentrations, while for sulphate the performance was better during the summer periods. Particulate
ammonium nitrate was only simulated in significant concentrations in the wintertime campaign. This
was found to be consistent with the measured composition of PM2.5 where most of nitrate (79e94%) and
a significant fraction of sulphate (24e37%) were estimated to be present as non-ammonium salts. These
non-ammonium nitrate salts were attributed to the formation of NaNO3. The model PM2.5 primary
elemental carbon simulations, evaluated with hourly resolution, captured the diurnal and seasonal
variability of PM2.5 BC concentrations at the urban site while poorer performance was observed at the
rural site. A large underestimation was observed for simulated PM2.5 organic carbon concentrations
during all campaigns. Scenarios of pollution events linked to emissions from south-west Spain, shipping
and contributions from more distant emission sources such as Portugal were identified. These results
highlight how the distinct features of PM2.5 composition in southern Europe regions, such as the large
contribution of non-ammonium salts, need to be taken into account both in model evaluation and in
future implementation of aerosol modelling systems.
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Bibliographic citation
Milford, C., Castell, N., Marrero, C., Rodríguez González, S., Sánchez de la Campa Verdona, A.M., Fernández Camacho, R., Rosa Díaz, J., Stein, A.:"Measurements and simulation of speciated PM2.5 in south-west
Europe". Atmospheric Environment. Vol 77, (2013), págs. 36-50. ISSN 1352-2310














