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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Concentrations, optical properties and sources of humic-like substances (HULIS) in fine particulate matter in Xi'an, Northwest China
Wenjuan CaoLu YangWei YuanHaiyan NiRu-jin HuangRu-jin HuangTing WangJie GuoHuabin HuangJing DuanThorsten Hoffmannsubject
AerosolsAir PollutantsChinaEnvironmental Engineering010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesChemistryFine particulate010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesPollutionAerosolHuman healthCoal burningEnvironmental chemistryHumansEnvironmental ChemistryMass concentration (chemistry)Particulate MatterSeasonsBrown carbonBiomass burningWaste Management and DisposalHumic SubstancesEnvironmental Monitoring0105 earth and related environmental sciencesdescription
Humic-like substances (HULIS) are ubiquitous in the atmospheric environment, which affects both human health and climate. We present here the mass concentration and optical characteristics of HULIS isolated from aerosol samples collected in Xi'an, China. Both mass concentration and absorption coefficient (Abs365) of HULIS show clear seasonal differences, with the highest average in winter (3.91 μgC m-3 and 4.78 M m-1, respectively) and the lowest in summer (0.65 μgC m-3 and 0.55 M m-1, respectively). The sources of HULIS_C and light absorption of HULIS were analyzed by positive matrix factorization (PMF) and four major sources were resolved, including secondary formation, biomass burning, coal burning, and vehicle emission. Our results show that secondary formation (i.e., gas-to-particle conversion from e.g., photochemical oxidation) was the major contributor to both HULIS_C (50%) and light absorption (55%) of HULIS in summer, biomass burning and coal burning were major sources of HULIS_C (~70%) and light absorption (~80%) of HULIS in winter. It is worth noting that biomass burning and coal burning had higher contribution to HULIS light absorption (47% in spring, 37% in summer, 73% in fall, and 77% in winter) than their corresponding contribution to HULIS_C concentration (41% in spring, 37% in summer, 54% in fall, and 69% in winter). However, vehicle emission had lower contribution to HULIS light absorption (26% in spring, 8% in summer, 18% in fall, and 11% in winter) than to HULIS_C concentration (24% in spring, 13% in summer, 28% in fall, and 18% in winter). These results suggest that HULIS from biomass burning and coal burning have higher light absorption ability than from vehicle emission.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-10-01 | Science of The Total Environment |