Abstract

Simultaneous daily measurements of water-soluble organic nitrogen (WSON), ammonium and nitrate were made between July and November 2008 at a rural location in south-east Scotland, using a ‘Cofer’ nebulizing sampler for the gas phase and collection on an open-face PTFE membrane for the particle phase. Average concentrations of NH 3 were 82 ± 17 nmol N m −3 (error is s.d. of triplicate samples), while oxidised N concentrations in the gas phase (from trapping NO 2 and HNO 3) were smaller, at 2.6 ± 2.2 nmol N m −3, and gas-phase WSON concentrations were 18 ± 11 nmol N m −3. The estimated collection efficiency of the nebulizing samplers for the gas phase was 88 (±8) % for NH 3, 37 (±16) % for NO 2 and 57 (±7) % for WSON; reported average concentrations have not been corrected for sampling efficiency. Concentrations in the particle phase were smaller, except for nitrate, at 21 ± 9, 10 ± 6 and 8 ± 9 nmol N m −3, respectively. The absence of correlation in either phase between WSON and either (NH 3 + NH 4 +) or NO 3 − concentrations suggests atmospheric WSON has diverse sources. During wet days, concentrations of gas and particle-phase inorganic N were lower than on dry days, whereas the converse was true for WSON. These data represent the first reports of simultaneous measurements of gas and particle phase water-soluble nitrogen compounds in rural air on a daily basis, and show that WSON occurs in both phases, contributing 20–25% of the total water-soluble nitrogen in air, in good agreement with earlier data on the contribution of WSON to total dissolved N in rainfall in the UK.

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