Abstract

Abstract. The study investigates the sources of fine organic aerosol (OA) in the boreal forest, based on measurements including both filter sampling (PM1) and online methods and carried out during a one-month campaign held in Hyytiälä, Finland, in spring 2007. Two aerosol mass spectrometers (Q-AMS, ToF-AMS) were employed to measure on-line concentrations of major non-refractory aerosol species, while the water extracts of the filter samples were analyzed by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy for organic functional group characterization of the polar organic fraction of the aerosol. AMS and NMR spectra were processed separately by non-negative factorization algorithms, in order to apportion the main components underlying the submicrometer organic aerosol composition and depict them in terms of both mass fragmentation patterns and functional group compositions. The NMR results supported the AMS speciation of oxidized organic aerosol (OOA) into two main fractions, which could be generally labelled as more and less oxidized organics. The more oxidized component was characterized by a mass spectrum dominated by the m/z 44 peak, and in parallel by a NMR spectrum showing aromatic and aliphatic backbones highly substituted with oxygenated functional groups (carbonyls/carboxyls and hydroxyls). Such component, contributing on average 50% of the OA mass throughout the observing period, was associated with pollution outbreaks from the Central Europe. The less oxidized component was enhanced in concomitance with air masses originating from the North-to-West sector, in agreement with previous investigations conducted at this site. NMR factor analysis was able to separate two distinct components under the less oxidized fraction of OA. One of these NMR-factors was associated with the formation of terrestrial biogenic secondary organic aerosol (BSOA), based on the comparison with spectral profiles obtained from laboratory experiments of terpenes photo-oxidation. The second NMR factor associated with western air masses was linked to biogenic marine sources, and was enriched in low-molecular weight aliphatic amines. Such findings provide evidence of at least two independent sources originating biogenic organic aerosols in Hyytiälä by oxidation and condensation mechanisms: reactive terpenes emitted by the boreal forest and compounds of marine origin, with the latter relatively more important when predominantly polar air masses reach the site. This study is an example of how spectroscopic techniques, such as proton NMR, can add functional group specificity for certain chemical features (like aromatics) of OA with respect to AMS. They can therefore be profitably exploited to complement aerosol mass spectrometric measurements in organic source apportionment studies.

Highlights

  • Atmospheric aerosol particles directly impact air quality, visibility and the radiation balance of the Earth, which in turn contributes to regulating the climate system on both regional and global scales (Ravishankara, 2005; IPCC, 2007)

  • Submicrometer organic aerosol observations employing aerosol mass spectrometry (AMS) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy were performed in the Finnish forest environment at Hyytialaduring three weeks of April 2007 characterized by variable atmospheric conditions and transport patterns, from very clean background to fairly polluted regimes

  • Results from factor analysis applied separately on AMS and NMR spectral datasets showed that air mass origin had a strong impact on organic composition, in agreement with findings of previous investigations at this site

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Summary

Introduction

Atmospheric aerosol particles directly impact air quality, visibility and the radiation balance of the Earth, which in turn contributes to regulating the climate system on both regional and global scales (Ravishankara, 2005; IPCC, 2007). Current estimates of global SOA production remain inaccurate They vary by over 2 orders of magnitude, because they are not well constrained by organic source apportionment studies (Simpson et al, 2007). An alternative approach is based on the integral chemical features of OC (e.g. mass fragments, functional groups, elemental ratios, isotopic ratios, ions, etc.) rather than on individual species. Such a bulk approach has been proposed by using Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) (Russell et al, 2011) and proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1HNMR) spectroscopies (Decesari et al, 2007, 2011). For the attribution of spectral fingerprints to natural and anthropogenic sources, use was made of data acquired during reaction chamber experiments performed in the SAPHIR facility, Julich

Experimental
Aerosol measurements
Factor analysis of AMS and NMR spectral data sets
On-line measurements results
Off-line analysis results
AMS factors
NMR factors
Comparison between AMS and NMR factors for OA source attribution
Conclusions
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