Abstract

Abstract. An Aerodyne quadrupole aerosol mass spectrometer (Q-AMS) was deployed in Hyytiälä, a forested rural measurement site in southern Finland, during a 2-week measurement campaign in spring 2005. Q-AMS measures mass concentrations of non-refractory species including sulphate, nitrate, ammonium and organics from submicron particles. A positive matrix factorization method was used in identifying two oxygenated organic aerosol (OOA) groups from the measured total organic mass. The properties of these groups were estimated from their diurnal concentration cycles and correlations with additional data such as air mass history, particle number size distributions, hygroscopic and ethanol growth factors and particle volatility. It was found that the aged and highly oxidized background organic aerosol (OOA1 or LV-OOA) species have a wide range of hygroscopic growth factors and volatilization temperatures, but on the average OOA1 is the less volatile and more hygroscopic organic group. Hygroscopic properties and volatilities of the OOA1 species are correlated so that the less volatile species have higher hygroscopic growth factors. The other, less oxidized organic aerosol group (OOA2 or SV-OOA) is more volatile and non-hygroscopic. Trajectory analysis showed that OOA1 and the inorganic species are mainly long-range transported anthropogenic pollutions. OOA2 species and its precursor gases have short atmospheric life times, so they are from local sources. These results span the range of previous observations of oxygen content, volatility and hygroscopic growth factor, simultaneously coupling all three measurements for the first time.

Highlights

  • Organic species have different chemical and physical properties and they constitute a significant fraction of submicron (PM1) continental aerosol particle mass (Saxena and Hildemann, 1996)

  • OOA1 and OOA2 properties were estimated by correlating their concentrations with data from three ultrafine tandem differential mobility analyzers measuring particle volatility (VTDMA) and hygroscopic (HTDMA) and ethanol (OTDMA) growth factors

  • Volume fractions were calculated for Aerosol Mass Spectrometer (AMS) compound groups (OOA1, OOA2 and sum of inorganic species) and volatility TDMA (VTDMA) groups, and the ZSR equation was fitted to the measured hygroscopic and ethanol growth factors

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Summary

Introduction

Organic species have different chemical and physical properties and they constitute a significant fraction of submicron (PM1) continental aerosol particle mass (Saxena and Hildemann, 1996). Growth factors as well as particle volatilities can be predicted when particle composition is measured and physical and chemical properties of the components are known (Aklilu et al, 2006; Varutbangkul et al, 2006; Gysel et al, 2004, 2007) Such analysis have been limited by poor knowledge of properties of the aerosol organic fraction, since organic species have diverse properties and their concentrations vary with time. We will divide the organic fraction into two groups and estimate their average properties (e.g. hygroscopicity, ethanol affinity, volatility and origin) based on their mass spectra, correlation with measured growth factors and volatility, diurnal concentration variations and analysis of back trajectories

The site
Growth factors
Particle volatility
Positive matrix factorization
Mass concentrations 36
Correlation with growth factors
Growth factor correlations based on AMS data
Growth factor correlations based on VTDMA data
Growth factor predictions
Volatilities of the species
Diurnal variations
Correlation with back trajectories
Conclusions
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