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Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal Characterization of PM2.5 aerosols dominated by local pollution and Asian dust observed at an urban site in Korea during Aerosol Characterization Experiments (ACE)-Asia project

Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal

Seung SP, Kim YJ, Sung YC, Seung JK
2007
Journal of The Air & Waste Management Association. 57 (4): 434-443

Daily fine particulate matter (PM2.5) samples were collected at Gwangju, Korea, during the Aerosol Characterization Experiments (ACE)-Asia Project to determine the chemical properties of PM2.5 originating from local pollution and Asian dust (AD) storms. During the study period, two significant events occurred on April 10-13 and 24-25, 2001, and a minor event occurred on April 19, 2001. Based on air mass transport pathways identified by back-trajectory calculation, the PM2.5 dataset was classified into three types of aerosol populations: local pollution and two AD aerosol types. The two AD types were transported along different pathways. One originated from Gobi desert area in Mongolia, passing through Hunshandake desert in Northern Inner Mongolia, urban and polluted regions of China (AD1), and the other originated in sandy deserts located in the Northeast Inner Mongolia Plateau and then flowed southward through the Korean peninsula (AD2). During the AD2 event, a smoke plume that originated in North Korea was transported to our study site. Mass balance closures show that crustal materials were the most significant species during both AD events, contributing ∼48% to the PM2.5 mass; sulfate aerosols (19.1%) and organic matter (OM; 24.6%) were the second greatest contributors during the AD1 and AD2 periods, respectively, indicating that aerosol properties were dependent on the transport pathway. The sulfate concentration constituted only 6.4% (4.5 μg/m3) of the AD2 PM 2.5 mass. OM was the major chemical species in the local pollution-dominated PM2.5 aerosols, accounting for 28.7% of the measured PM2.5 mass, followed by sulfate (21.4%), nitrate (15%), ammonium (12.8%), elemental carbon (8.9%), and crustal material (6.5%). Together with substantial enhancement of the crustal elements (Mg, Al, K, Ca, Sc, Ti, Mn, Fe, Sr, Zr, Ba, and Ce), higher concentrations of pollution elements (S, V, Ni, Zn, As, Cd, and Pb) were observed during AD1 and AD2 than during the local pollution period, indicating that, in addition to crustal material, the AD dust storms also had a significant influence on anthropogenic elements. Copyright 2007 Air & Waste Management Association.

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Resource Description

    Air Pollution, Extreme Weather-Related Event or Disaster
    • Air Pollution, Extreme Weather-Related Event or Disaster: Particulate Matter, Other Air Pollution, Specify
      • Particulate Matter, Other Air Pollution, Specify: SOx; NOx; trace metals
      Air Pollution (other)
    • Air Pollution, Extreme Weather-Related Event or Disaster: Other Extreme Weather-Related Event or Weather-Related Disaster, Specify
      • Other Extreme Weather-Related Event or Weather-Related Disaster, Specify: dust storm
      Extreme Weather Event (other)
    General Geographic Feature
    Non-United States
    • Non-United States: Asia
    General Health Impact
    Research Article
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