Abstract

Abstract. The reaction of sea salt (or biomass burning) particles with sulfuric acid and nitric acid leads to the displacement of chloride relative to sodium (or potassium). We have developed a new particle mass spectrometer to quantify non-refractory and refractory sulfate aerosols (referred to as refractory aerosol thermal desorption mass spectrometer: rTDMS). The combination of a graphite particle collector and a carbon dioxide laser enables high desorption temperature (blackbody equivalent radiation temperature of up to 930 ∘C). Ion signals originating from evolved gas molecules are detected by a quadrupole mass spectrometer. Here we propose a new method to quantify the mass concentrations of sodium nitrate (NaNO3: SN), sodium chloride (NaCl: SC), sodium sulfate (Na2SO4: SS), potassium nitrate (KNO3: PN), potassium chloride (KCl: PC), and potassium sulfate (K2SO4: PS) particles by using the rTDMS. Laboratory experiments were performed to test the sensitivities of the rTDMS to various types of particles. We measured ion signals originating from single-component particles for each compound and found a good linearity (r2>0.8) between the major ion signals and mass loadings. We also measured ion signals originating from internally mixed SN + SC + SS (or PN + PC + PS) particles and found that the temporal profiles of ion signals at m/z 23 (Na+) (or 39; K+) were characterized by three sequential peaks associated with the evolution of the desorption temperature. We tested potential interferences in the quantification of sea salt particles under real-world conditions by artificially generating “modified” sea salt particles from a mixture of diluted seawater and SN (or SS) solution. The SS/SC ratios estimated from the ion signals at m/z 23, 36 (H35Cl+), and 48 (SO+) agreed well with those predicted from the solution concentrations to within ∼10 %. The SN/SC ratios estimated from the ion signals at m/z 30 (NO+) and 36 also agreed with those predicted from the solution concentrations to within ∼15 %, whereas the SN/SC ratios estimated from m/z 23 were significantly lower than the predicted values. Based on these experimental results, the applicability of the rTDMS to ambient measurements of sea salt particles is discussed.

Highlights

  • Aerosols have large impacts on the Earth’s radiation budget by scattering and absorbing solar shortwave radiation and by acting as cloud condensation nuclei (IPCC, 2013)

  • These results indicate that the temporal profiles of ion signals at m/z 23 originating from internally mixed SC + SS + SN particles were characterized by three sequential peaks associated with the evolution of the desorption temperature

  • The quantification of sodium and potassium salt particles by the refractory aerosol thermal desorption mass spectrometer (rTDMS) was investigated in the laboratory

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Summary

Introduction

Aerosols have large impacts on the Earth’s radiation budget by scattering and absorbing solar shortwave radiation (direct effect) and by acting as cloud condensation nuclei (indirect effect) (IPCC, 2013). The size and chemical composition of aerosol particles are important for quantitatively estimating the direct and indirect effects of aerosols. Sea salt aerosols generally make the largest contribution to the budget of natural aerosols in the troposphere (Seinfeld and Pandis, 2006; IPCC, 2013). Biomass burning makes large contributions to the global budget of soot, organics, and inorganic compounds (Andreae and Merlet, 2001; Akagi et al, 2011; Song et al, 2018). Potassium chloride (KCl: PC) is the dominant form of chloride in biomass burning aerosols (Reid et al, 2005). Potassium may be present in biological particles emitted from

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