Abstract

Aerosol samples were collected at Catania (Italy), from 16 March to 13 June 2005. The sampling was performed using a low pressure five-stage Berner cascade impactor. The samples were analysed for total aerosol mass, Water Soluble Organic Carbon (WSOC), Total Carbon (TC) and main inorganic ionic species. The Water-Insoluble Carbon (WINC) was derived by the difference: TC-WSOC. The samples share some common features: ammonium sulphate and carbon-containing species (both soluble and insoluble) are the largest contributors of fine particle mass, while coarse particles essentially consist of sea-salt, sodium nitrate and unaccounted PM (probably crustal material). The WINC/WSOC ratio decreases from the smallest size range to the large accumulation mode range (0.42–1.2 μm), while the $${\text{nssSO}}^{ = }_{4} $$ and $$ {\text{NH}}^{ + }_{4} $$ contribution rises. The water-insoluble carbonaceous matter is the dominant component in the smallest particles (0.05–0.14 μm). We identified four different aerosol types, corresponding to different sources, contributing to the total particles load of the investigated urban environment: vehicular traffic, producing primary carbonaceous insoluble particles, secondary aerosols, dominating the composition of accumulation mode particles, and marine particles and mineral dust (both important components of the coarse aerosol fraction).

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