Abstract

Abstract. Observations of aerosol hygroscopic growth and CCN activation spectra for submicron particles are reported for the T1 ground site outside of Mexico City during the MIRAGE 2006 campaign. κ-Köhler theory is used to evaluate the characteristic hygroscopicity parameter, κ*, for the CCN active aerosol population using both size-resolved HTMDA and size-resolved CCNc measurements. Organic mass fractions (forg) are evaluated from size-resolved aerosol mass spectrometer (AMS) measurements, from which predictions of the hygroscopicity parameter are compared against κ*. Strong diurnal changes in aerosol water uptake parameters and aerosol composition are observed. We find that new particle formation (NPF) events are correlated with an increased κ* and CCN-active fraction during the daytime, with greater impact on smaller particles. During NPF events, the number concentration of 40 nm particles acting as CCN at 0.51% ± 0.06% supersaturation can surpass by more than a factor of two the corresponding concentrations of 100 nm particles. We also find that at 06:00–08:00 LT throughout the campaign, fresh traffic emissions result in substantial changes to the chemical distribution of the aerosol, with on average 65% externally mixed fraction for 40 nm particles and 30% externally mixed fraction for 100 nm particles, whereas at midday nearly all particles of both sizes can be described as "internally mixed". Average activation spectra and growth factor distributions are analyzed for different time periods characterizing the daytime (with and without NPF events), the early morning "rush hour" and the entire campaign. We show that κ* derived from CCNc measurements decreases as a function of size during all time periods, while the CCN-active fraction increases as a function of size. Size-resolved AMS measurements do not predict the observed trend for κ* versus particle size, which can be attributed to unresolved mixing state and the presence of refractory material not measured by the AMS. Measured κ* typically ranges from 0.2 to 0.35, and organics typically make up 60–85 % of the aerosol mass in the size range studied. We show that κAMS is able to describe CCN concentrations reasonably well, provided mixing-state information is available, especially at the highest CCN concentrations. This is consistent with other CCN studies carried out in urban environments, and is partly due to the fact that the highest CCN concentrations occur during the daytime when the aerosol is internally mixed. During the early morning rush hour, however, failing to account for the aerosol mixing state results in systematic overestimation of CCN concentrations by as much as 50–100% on average.

Highlights

  • The greater Mexico City area is home to ∼20 million people, making it one of the most populous metropolitan areas in the world

  • Dry particle size distributions are shown (Fig. 2f), with horizontal lines indicating the lower and upper particle sizes in our analysis. κCCNc for 100 nm particles is 0.2 ± 0.1 during MIRAGE 2006, and κCCNc is often higher for particles smaller than 100 nm (Fig. 2c)

  • Aerosol hygroscopicity was simultaneously measured with a humidified tandem differential mobility analyzer (HTDMA) covering the same particle size range

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Summary

Introduction

The greater Mexico City area is home to ∼20 million people, making it one of the most populous metropolitan areas in the world. A subset of this study, called MIRAGE (Megacities Impacts on Regional and Global Environments), included measurements at several ground-based sites (Fast et al, 2007; Molina et al, 2010) over the month of March 2006. The measurements presented here focus on the water uptake properties of ambient aerosol outside of Mexico City at the University of Tecamac (T1) ground site from 16–31 March 2006. Measurements under both subsaturated (relative humidity, RH100 %) conditions were obtained, from which the evolution of the aerosol mixing state is analyzed in detail. We discuss the dominant processes impacting the aerosol water uptake properties (e.g., new particle formation events, primary emissions and aging of the aerosol)

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