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Atmospheric Processing of Loess Particles in a Polluted Urban Area of Northwestern China
Author(s) -
Chen Yang,
Liu Huanwu,
Huang RuJin,
Yang Fumo,
Tian Mi,
Yao Xiaojiang,
Shen Zhenxing,
Yan Lulu,
Cao Junji
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8996
pISSN - 2169-897X
DOI - 10.1029/2018jd029956
Subject(s) - loess , sulfate , environmental chemistry , nitrate , aerosol , ammonium sulfate , chemistry , relative humidity , environmental science , mineralogy , geology , meteorology , physics , organic chemistry , chromatography , geomorphology
Loess is an important dust component of airborne particles in Northwestern China. Knowledge of the chemical composition, mixing state, and processing of loess particles in urban plumes is still limited. Urban loess particles were characterized using a single‐particle aerosol mass spectrometer. To understand sources and processing of loess particles, source samples from the road, urban background, soil, construction, and biomass burning ash were collected in the urban areas and characterized. Loess particles were determined as a kind of calcium‐silicate‐rich ones, which were internally mixed with calcium, silicates, potassium, elemental carbon, organics, ammonium, sulfate, and nitrate. Road and soil were major sources of loess particles. Among the aged loess particles, the average peak areas of taken‐up nitrate and sulfate were comparable to that of (Fe+Ca+Al). Diurnal uptake profiles of chloride, sulfate, oxalate, and nitrate on loess particles were analyzed. The nocturnal elevation of chloride occurred significantly due to the uptake of HCl (g). Nighttime nitrate formation occurred prevalently under high relative humidity conditions via the heterogeneous hydrolysis of N 2 O 5 . The nighttime enrichment of oxalate, which is a marker for aqueous‐formatted secondary organic aerosol, was also found. Besides the nighttime chemistry, the daytime photochemical activities were also a drive for the elevations of sulfate, nitrate, and ammonium. Conclusively, the processing of loess particles in polluted urban plumes significantly altered their chemical composition and mixing state.

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