Assessing the effect of a Saharan dust storm on oxygenated organic compounds at Izaña, Tenerife (July–August 2002)
Author(s) -
Salisbury G.,
Williams J.,
Gros V.,
Bartenbach S.,
Xu X.,
Fischer H.,
Kormann R.,
de Reus M.,
Zöllner M.
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2005jd006840
Subject(s) - isoprene , aerosol , acetaldehyde , troposphere , formaldehyde , environmental chemistry , mineral dust , trace gas , chemistry , atmospheric chemistry , environmental science , atmospheric sciences , ozone , organic chemistry , geology , ethanol , copolymer , polymer
In July–August 2002 the field measurement campaign Mineral Dust and Tropospheric Chemistry (MINATROC) was carried out at the Global Atmosphere Watch station at Izaña, Tenerife, to study the interaction of mineral dust aerosol and tropospheric chemistry. Organic trace gas mixing ratios were determined for the following: alkanes (e.g., propane); alkenes (isoprene); aromatic compounds (toluene); and oxygenated species (CO, methanol, formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, and acetone) simultaneously with aerosol measurements of dust. Local emissions of biogenic (isoprene and methanol) and anthropogenic compounds (CO and toluene) were observed at Izaña by day. Nighttime mixing ratios of organic species were interpreted as representative of the Atlantic free troposphere. A local production and loss budget for formaldehyde suggested that isoprene dominates production by day, and a significant dry deposition velocity is estimated at night of 0.74 cm/s. The total reactivity of the organic trace gases measured to OH is estimated as 1.7 s −1 by day and 0.7 s −1 by night. During the campaign a dense Saharan dust plume, with aerosol masses exceeding 500 μ g m −3 , persisted for 3 days. Air masses containing dust appeared to be generally more polluted (in acetone and CO) than the prevailing westerly flow, but local biogenic emissions were little affected (e.g., methanol and isoprene). Although during the dust period the daily cycles and the absolute concentrations of some oxygenated species are different (e.g., acetaldehyde), these changes could not be attributed unequivocally to heterogeneous reactions on dust.
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