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  4. PH of Aerosols in a Polluted Atmosphere: Source Contributions to Highly Acidic Aerosol
 
research article

PH of Aerosols in a Polluted Atmosphere: Source Contributions to Highly Acidic Aerosol

Shi, G.
•
Xu, J.
•
Peng, X.
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2017
Environmental Science & Technology

Acidity (pH) plays a key role in the physical and chemical behavior of PM2.5. However, understanding of how specific PM sources impact aerosol pH is rarely considered. Performing source apportionment of PM2.5 allows a unique link of sources pH of aerosol from the polluted city. Hourly water-soluble (WS) ions of PM2.5 were measured online from December 25th, 2014 to June 19th, 2015 in a northern city in China. Five sources were resolved including secondary nitrate (41%), secondary sulfate (26%), coal combustion (14%), mineral dust (11%), and vehicle exhaust (9%). The influence of source contributions to pH was estimated by ISORROPIA-II. The lowest aerosol pH levels were found at low WS-ion levels and then increased with increasing total ion levels, until high ion levels occur, at which point the aerosol becomes more acidic as both sulfate and nitrate increase. Ammonium levels increased nearly linearly with sulfate and nitrate until approximately 20 μg m-3, supporting that the ammonium in the aerosol was more limited by thermodynamics than source limitations, and aerosol pH responded more to the contributions of sources such as dust than levels of sulfate. Commonly used pH indicator ratios were not indicative of the pH estimated using the thermodynamic model. © 2017 American Chemical Society.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/acs.est.6b05736
Author(s)
Shi, G.
Xu, J.
Peng, X.
Xiao, Z.
Chen, K.
Tian, Y.
Guan, X.
Feng, Y.
Yu, H.
Nenes, Athanasios  
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Date Issued

2017

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Published in
Environmental Science & Technology
Volume

51

Start page

4289

End page

4296

Subjects

Coal combustion

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Coal dust

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Crashworthiness

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Dust

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Ions

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Nitrates

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Sulfur compounds

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Thermodynamics

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Acidic aerosols

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Chemical behavior

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Secondary nitrates

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Source apportionment

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Source contributions

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Thermodynamic model

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Vehicle exhausts

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Watersoluble

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Aerosols

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ammonia

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indicator

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nitrate

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sulfate

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aerosol

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air pollutant

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particulate matter

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acidity

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aerosol

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atmospheric pollution

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coal combustion

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dust

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exhaust emission

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particulate matter

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pH

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source apportionment

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sulfate

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thermodynamics

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traffic emission

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aerosol

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air pollution

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Article

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chemical composition

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combustion

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dust

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mineral dust

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particulate matter

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pH

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thermodynamics

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aerosol

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air pollutant

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atmosphere

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environmental monitoring

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pH

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China

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Aerosols

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Air Pollutants

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Atmosphere

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Environmental Monitoring

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Hydrogen-Ion Concentration

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Particulate Matter

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
LAPI  
Available on Infoscience
October 15, 2018
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/148882
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