Abstract

Abstract. Multiple state-of-the-art instruments sampled ambient aerosol in Riverside, California during the 2005 Study of Organic Aerosols at Riverside (SOAR) to investigate the chemical composition and potential sources of fine particles (PMf) in the inland region of Southern California. In this paper, we briefly summarize the spatial, meteorological and gas-phase conditions during SOAR-1 (15 July–15 August), provide detailed intercomparisons of high-resolution aerosol mass spectrometer (HR-AMS) measurements against complementary measurements, and report the average composition of PMf including the composition of the organic fraction measured by the HR-AMS. Daily meteorology and gas-phase species concentrations were highly consistent, displaying clear diurnal cycles and weekday/weekend contrast. HR-AMS measurements of non-refractory submicron (NR-PM1) mass are consistent and highly correlated with those from a filter dynamics measurement system tapered-element oscillating microbalance (TEOM), while the correlation between HR-AMS and heated TEOM measurements is lower due to loss of high volatility species including ammonium nitrate from the heated TEOM. Speciated HR-AMS measurements are also consistent with complementary measurements as well as with measurements from a collocated compact AMS while HR-AMS OC is similar to standard semi-continuous Sunset measurements within the combined uncertainties of both instruments. A correction intended to account for the loss of semi-volatile OC from the Sunset, however, yields measurements ~30% higher than either HR-AMS or standard Sunset measurements. On average, organic aerosol (OA) was the single largest component of PMf. OA composition was investigated using both elemental analysis and positive matrix factorization (PMF) of HR-AMS OA spectra. Oxygen is the main heteroatom during SOAR-1, with O/C exhibiting a diurnal minimum of 0.28 during the morning rush hour and maximum of 0.42 during the afternoon. O/C is broadly anti-correlated with H/C, while N/C and S/C (excluding organonitrate (ON) and organosulfate (OS) functionalities) are far lower than O/C at about 0.015 and ~0.001, respectively. When ON and OS estimates are included O/C, N/C, and S/C increase by factors of 1.21, 2, and 30, respectively, while H/C changes are insignificant. The increase in these ratios implies that ON accounts for ~1/2 of the organic nitrogen while OS dominate organic sulfur at this location. Accounting for the estimated ON and OS also improves the agreement between anions and cations measured by HR-AMS by ~8%, while amines have only a very small impact (1%) on this balance. Finally, a number of primary and secondary OA components were resolved by PMF. Among these a hydrocarbon-like OA and two minor, local OA components, one of which was associated with amines, were attributed to primary emissions and contributed a minor fraction (~20%) of OA mass. The remaining OA mass was attributed to a number of secondary oxidized OA (OOA) components including the previously-identified low-volatility and semi-volatile OOA components. In addition, we also report for the first time the presence of two additional OOA components.

Highlights

  • Aerosols are of interest due to their widespread impact on atmospheric processes including radiative forcing, heterogeneous reactions, visibility reduction on both local and regional scales, and their role in increased human morbidity and mortality

  • In order to capitalize on the collocation of many stateof-the-art aerosol instruments and expand instrumental comparisons to a larger set of measurements under conditions where SOA dominated the composition of organic aerosol (OA), here we provide additional detailed comparisons among measurements obtained by the high-resolution aerosol mass spectrometer (HR-aerosol mass spectrometer (AMS)) and an ensemble of PM2.5 instruments that are routinely employed in the characterization of ambient aerosol composition

  • Because only EC was separately quantified during Study of Organic Aerosols at Riverside (SOAR)-1, we compare the sum of HR-AMS NR-PM1 and Sunset1 EC (HR-AMS + EC) with available tapered-element oscillating microbalance (TEOM) measurements

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Summary

Introduction

Aerosols are of interest due to their widespread impact on atmospheric processes including radiative forcing, heterogeneous reactions, visibility reduction on both local and regional scales, and their role in increased human morbidity and mortality. The most comprehensive source apportionment analysis of SOAR-1 data was performed by Docherty et al (2008), where several independent source apportionment techniques (EC-tracer, CO-tracer, CMB-OMM, water soluble organic carbon (WSOC), and PMF of HR-AMS OA spectra) were applied to SOAR-1 OA measurements Stone et al (2009) investigated the contribution of functional groups to the water soluble OA fraction in a variety of locations including Riverside using liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry to better understand the formation of HULIS in atmospheric aerosols Results of this analysis suggest that motor vehicles, biomass burning, and SOA each may make significant contributions to HULIS formation. We report results of elemental analysis and positive matrix factorization of HRAMS OA

Representativeness of the sampling site
General considerations
NR-PM1 measurements
PMF of HR-AMS OA mass spectra
Gas phase and meteorological measurements
Total PMf intercomparisons
Intercomparison of ToF-AMS measurements
Comparison of HR-AMS and Sunset OC
PMF analysis of OA composition
Summary of OA composition
Conclusions
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