Processing of Trace Metals in Atmospheric Particulate Matter

abstract: Particulate trace metals can enter the atmosphere as mineral dust, sea spray, anthropogenic emissions, biomass burning, etc. Once in the atmosphere they can undergo a variety of transformations including aqueous phase (cloud) processing, photochemical reactions, interact with gases, and ul...

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Other Authors: Marcotte, Aurelie R. (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.29900
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-299002018-06-22T03:06:12Z Processing of Trace Metals in Atmospheric Particulate Matter abstract: Particulate trace metals can enter the atmosphere as mineral dust, sea spray, anthropogenic emissions, biomass burning, etc. Once in the atmosphere they can undergo a variety of transformations including aqueous phase (cloud) processing, photochemical reactions, interact with gases, and ultimately deposit. Metals in aerosols are of particular interest because of their natural and anthropogenic sources as well as their effects on local (human health) and global (climate change) scales. This work investigates the metal component of atmospheric particles and how it changes during physical and chemical processes at local, regional and global scales, through laboratory and field studies. In the first part of this work, the impact of local dust storms (haboobs) on ambient metal concentrations and speciation is investigated in Tempe, AZ. It was found that metal concentrations substantially increase (> 10 times) during these events before returning to pre-storm levels. In a second part of this work, the impact of fog processing on metal concentrations, solubility and speciation is examined through field observations in California’s Central Valley. The observations show that fog processing has a profound effect on local metal concentrations but the trends are not consistent between sites or even between events, indicating complex processes that need further investigation. For example, fogs have an effect on scavenging and solubility of iron in Davis, while in Fresno soluble iron content is indicative of the source of the aerosol. The last part of the thesis investigates the role of particle size on the solubilization of iron from mineral dust aerosols during global atmospheric transport through laboratory experiments. The experiments showed that mineralogy and pH have the greatest effect on iron solubility in atmospheric aerosols in general while particle size and photochemistry impact mainly the solubility of iron oxides. Dissertation/Thesis Marcotte, Aurelie R. (Author) Herckes, Pierre (Advisor) Anbar, Ariel (Advisor) Fraser, Matthew (Committee member) Hayes, Mark (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Atmospheric chemistry Aerosol and fog composition Atmospheric processing Iron solubility Trace metals eng 132 pages Doctoral Dissertation Chemistry 2015 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.29900 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2015
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Atmospheric chemistry
Aerosol and fog composition
Atmospheric processing
Iron solubility
Trace metals
spellingShingle Atmospheric chemistry
Aerosol and fog composition
Atmospheric processing
Iron solubility
Trace metals
Processing of Trace Metals in Atmospheric Particulate Matter
description abstract: Particulate trace metals can enter the atmosphere as mineral dust, sea spray, anthropogenic emissions, biomass burning, etc. Once in the atmosphere they can undergo a variety of transformations including aqueous phase (cloud) processing, photochemical reactions, interact with gases, and ultimately deposit. Metals in aerosols are of particular interest because of their natural and anthropogenic sources as well as their effects on local (human health) and global (climate change) scales. This work investigates the metal component of atmospheric particles and how it changes during physical and chemical processes at local, regional and global scales, through laboratory and field studies. In the first part of this work, the impact of local dust storms (haboobs) on ambient metal concentrations and speciation is investigated in Tempe, AZ. It was found that metal concentrations substantially increase (> 10 times) during these events before returning to pre-storm levels. In a second part of this work, the impact of fog processing on metal concentrations, solubility and speciation is examined through field observations in California’s Central Valley. The observations show that fog processing has a profound effect on local metal concentrations but the trends are not consistent between sites or even between events, indicating complex processes that need further investigation. For example, fogs have an effect on scavenging and solubility of iron in Davis, while in Fresno soluble iron content is indicative of the source of the aerosol. The last part of the thesis investigates the role of particle size on the solubilization of iron from mineral dust aerosols during global atmospheric transport through laboratory experiments. The experiments showed that mineralogy and pH have the greatest effect on iron solubility in atmospheric aerosols in general while particle size and photochemistry impact mainly the solubility of iron oxides. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Chemistry 2015
author2 Marcotte, Aurelie R. (Author)
author_facet Marcotte, Aurelie R. (Author)
title Processing of Trace Metals in Atmospheric Particulate Matter
title_short Processing of Trace Metals in Atmospheric Particulate Matter
title_full Processing of Trace Metals in Atmospheric Particulate Matter
title_fullStr Processing of Trace Metals in Atmospheric Particulate Matter
title_full_unstemmed Processing of Trace Metals in Atmospheric Particulate Matter
title_sort processing of trace metals in atmospheric particulate matter
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.29900
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