Abstract

Dithiothreitol-measured oxidative potential (OPDTT) can chemically quantify the adverse health effects of atmospheric aerosols. Some chemical species are characterized with DTT activities, and the particle diameter and surface area control DTT oxidizability; however, the physical contribution to OPDTT by atmospheric aerosols is controversial. Therefore, we performed field observations and aerosol sampling at urban and rural sites in Japan to investigate the effect of both physical and chemical properties on the variation in OPDTT of atmospheric aerosols. The shifting degree of the representative diameter to the ultrafine range (i.e., the predominance degree of ultrafine particles) was retrieved from the ratio between the lung-deposited surface area and mass concentrations. The chemical components and OPDTT were also elucidated. We discerned strong positive correlations of K, Mn, Pb, NH4+, SO42−, and pyrolyzable organic carbon with OPDTT. Hence, anthropogenic combustion, the iron–steel industry, and secondary organic aerosols were the major emission sources governing OPDTT variations. The increased specific surface area did not lead to the increase in the OPDTT of atmospheric aerosols, despite the existing relevance of the surface area of water-insoluble particles to DTT oxidizability. Overall, the OPDTT of atmospheric aerosols can be estimated by the mass of chemical components related to OPDTT variation, owing to numerous factors controlling DTT oxidizability (e.g., strong contribution of water-soluble particles). Our findings can be used to estimate OPDTT via several physicochemical parameters without its direct measurement.

Highlights

  • Atmospheric aerosol particles cause various adverse effects on human health, especially by triggering respiratory diseases [1,2,3]

  • Our results indicate that it is possible to roughly estimate the OPDTT of atmospheric aerosol particles using the mass of chemical components, which control the variations in OPvDTT at each site

  • This study investigated the contributions of both particle size and chemical compositions to the variation in OPDTT of atmospheric aerosol particles

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Summary

Introduction

Atmospheric aerosol particles cause various adverse effects on human health, especially by triggering respiratory diseases [1,2,3]. The potential effects of particulate matter (PM) on a human body are determined by a combination of particle properties such as number, size, surface area, mass, and chemical composition. To this end, numerous physicochemical parameters of aerosol particles have been extensively studied and monitored worldwide to evaluate their toxicity [4,5,6]. We performed field observations o3fofth22e mass and lung-deposited surface area (LDSA) concentrations alongside aerosol sampling at urban and rural sites in Japan, where the emission sources contributing to OPDTT can be artemurabraknabalnyddriuffrearlensitteasccinorJdaipnagnt,owahperreevtihoeuesmsiimssuiolantisoonu[r4c4e]s. The observations at the Noto site lasted from 20 September 2020 to 11 June 2021

Observations
Aerosol Sampling
Chemical Component Analysis
Regional Differences in Physicochemical Properties and OPDTT
Contribution of Chemical Properties to the Variation in OPDTT
Contribution of Physical Properties to the Variations in OPDTT
Conclusions
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