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  4. Highly Acidic Ambient Particles, Soluble Metals, and Oxidative Potential: A Link between Sulfate and Aerosol Toxicity
 
research article

Highly Acidic Ambient Particles, Soluble Metals, and Oxidative Potential: A Link between Sulfate and Aerosol Toxicity

Fang, T.
•
Guo, H.
•
Zeng, L.
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2017
Environmental Science & Technology

Soluble transition metals in particulate matter (PM) can generate reactive oxygen species in vivo by redox cycling, leading to oxidative stress and adverse health effects. Most metals, such as those from roadway traffic, are emitted in an insoluble form, but must be soluble for redox cycling. Here we present the mechanism of metals dissolution by highly acidic sulfate aerosol and the effect on particle oxidative potential (OP) through analysis of size distributions. Size-segregated ambient PM were collected from a road-side and representative urban site in Atlanta, GA. Elemental and organic carbon, ions, total and water-soluble metals, and water-soluble OP were measured. Particle pH was determined with a thermodynamic model using measured ionic species. Sulfate was spatially uniform and found mainly in the fine mode, whereas total metals and mineral dust cations were highest at the road-side site and in the coarse mode, resulting in a fine mode pH < 2 and near neutral coarse mode. Soluble metals and OP peaked at the intersection of these modes demonstrating that sulfate plays a key role in producing highly acidic fine aerosols capable of dissolving primary transition metals that contribute to aerosol OP. Sulfate-driven metals dissolution may account for sulfate-health associations reported in past studies. © 2017 American Chemical Society.

  • Details
  • Metrics
Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/acs.est.6b06151
Author(s)
Fang, T.
Guo, H.
Zeng, L.
Verma, V.
Nenes, Athanasios  
Weber, R. J.
Date Issued

2017

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Published in
Environmental Science & Technology
Volume

51

Start page

2611

End page

2620

Subjects

Aerosols

•

Carbon

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Dissolution

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Organic carbon

•

Particle size analysis

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Roads and streets

•

Sulfur compounds

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Transition metals

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Urban growth

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Adverse health effects

•

Ambient particles

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Elemental and organic carbons

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Metals dissolution

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Oxidative potential

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Particulate Matter

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Reactive oxygen species

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Thermodynamic model

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Metals

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ascorbic acid

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copper

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hydronium ion

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iron

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manganese

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organic carbon

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sulfate

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transition element

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water

•

aerosol

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air pollutant

•

metal

•

particulate matter

•

sulfate

•

aerosol

•

dissolution

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organic carbon

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oxidative stress

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particulate matter

•

reactive oxygen species

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sulfate

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thermodynamics

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toxicity

•

urban site

•

acidity

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aerosol

•

air monitoring

•

ambient air

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aqueous solution

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Article

•

comparative study

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controlled study

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dissolution

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ecotoxicity

•

mineral dust

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oxidation reduction potential

•

particle size

•

particulate matter

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pH

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thermodynamics

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urban area

•

air pollutant

•

environmental monitoring

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particulate matter

•

Atlanta

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Georgia

•

United States

•

Aerosols

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Air Pollutants

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Environmental Monitoring

•

Metals

•

Particle Size

•

Particulate Matter

•

Sulfates

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/20.500.14299/148884
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