Abstract
Fine particulate matter (PM2.5) can induce the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and damage human tissues. Fully understanding the generation mechanism of oxidative toxicity of PM is challenging due to the extremely complex composition. Classification methods may be helpful in understanding the ROS production mechanisms of complex PM. This study used a solvent extraction and solid phase extraction methods to separate five different components from PM2.5 includes non-extractable components that have rarely been studied before, and discussed the coupling effect and heterogeneous characteristics of oxidation activity they produced. It is found that the water-soluble component contribute about half of the PM oxidation activity, and metal ions probably contribute most of the oxidation activity. Experimental results show that oxygen molecules is the main precursor of ROS production, which depends on whether the aerosol component has catalytic conversion ability. After mixing humic-like substance (HULIS) and hydrophilic water-soluble (HP-WSM) PM, the oxidation activity increased, it is most likely to be a synergistic effect between HULIS and metal ions is dominant, but limited contribution to oxidation activity. It turns out that the non-extractable and water-insoluble components have higher oxidation activity than the water-soluble components, and the two components exhibited a more durable ability to produce 1O2. The reaction of soluble components to produce ROS is homogeneous, but it is obviously heterogeneous for these insoluble components. This study suggests that future attention should be paid to the oxidative toxicity of the non-extractable component, and that single PM component or compound cannot simply be studied independently.
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