Abstract

For the first time, the change in the physicochemical properties, ions composition, concentrations, and ratio of soluble and insoluble potentially toxic elements (PTEs), as well as sources contribution to the content of PTEs using principal component analysis with multiple linear regression (PCA-MLR) were determined in the Moscow precipitation before, during and after the lockdown (January–July 2020). The impact of the lockdown on the precipitation composition was ambivalent. The decrease in the precipitation pollution with PTEs (by 10–99% for soluble PTEs and 9–61% for insoluble ones) was caused by the purification of the atmosphere from aerosols during their long-term washing out by precipitation and a decrease in anthropogenic emissions. Air advection to Moscow from the suburbs, where wood, coal, household and agricultural wastes were burned, on the contrary, contributed to the growth of precipitation pollution with insoluble P, Pb, Cd, soluble P, Ag, Pb, Sb, As, Cd, as well as [Cl−] and [K+]. After the lockdown, the restoration of the level of precipitation pollution by PTEs occurred gradually due to the time lag between the increase in atmospheric pollution and the washing out of aerosols by precipitation, as well as dilution by exceptional rainfall amount. Faster restoration rates of insoluble PTEs compared to soluble ones are associated with the rapid increase in the activity of the urban source (road and construction dust, industrial and traffic emissions). The lifting lockdown restrictions reduced the contribution of industrial sources to the content of soluble PTEs forms (from 38–66% to 6%) due to an increase in the contribution of road dust and non-exhaust emissions, soil particles resuspension, waste and fuel combustion, and vehicle emissions. A decrease in the contribution of vehicle emissions, road dust resuspension, and construction dust to the content of insoluble PTEs from winter to summer due to the lockdown influence and a large amount of precipitation in late spring and early summer was confirmed. The results highlighted the need for further studies of the chemical composition and properties of precipitation in the city in similar periods for the correct separation of the influence of social, economic, emission, meteorological, and physicochemical factors on the content and the ratio of PTEs forms.

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