Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike...

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Atmospheric Particulate Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration and Basics of Concentration Estimation Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319: Air Module CEE 6319: Air Module

Transcript of Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike...

Page 1: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Chemical Composition and Basics of

Concentration EstimationConcentration Estimation

Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil LeeLee

CEE 6319: Air ModuleCEE 6319: Air Module

Page 2: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

Overview

• Week 1 (April 8)– Lecture (Bergin)

• Background (effects, extent of problem, PM characteristics, etc.)• An overview of filter based sampling

• Week 2 (April 11 -15)– Lecture (Bergin)

• Nut and bolts of atmospheric particulate measurements• Detection limit determination

– Lab (Lee)• Begin sampling ambient particulate matter on EST roof

• Week 3 (April 17-22)– Lab (Lee)

• Finish sampling• Laboratory analyses (mass, ions, carbon, select elements)

• Week 4 (April 29)• Lab due on last day of classes

Page 3: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

P

Potential Gas/Particle Interactions at a Filter Surface

Page 4: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

PM2.5 Mass from Teflon Filter Gravimetry

Equilibration of Teflon filter samples in Class 1000 Clean Room

[PM] < 1000/scf, T = 21 +-0.5 oC, RH = 33 +-3 %

Mettler Toledo MT5 Electronic Micro-Balance

Exp. DL = 1.2 +-0.02 g; P = +- 0.4 % @ 1 g; A = +-0.001 % {1-500 mg}

Page 5: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:
Page 6: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:
Page 7: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

PM2.5 NAAQS will also impact many smaller cities

Monitors at which the 1999 annual average [PM2.5] exceeds (yellow and red) the 15 g/m3 annual average PM2.5 NAAQS.

Page 8: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

Annual Average PM2.5 in Urban Areas, 2002

Page 9: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

PM2.5 Concentrations Across the PRD

•Concentrations at all sites above annual U.S NAAQS

•Organic carbon and sulfate are the dominant species

•Guangzhou appears to be major source of PM

Page 10: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

EC2.1%

OC9.5%

Unidentif ied20%

Trace Metals1.4%

Crustal Material51%

NH4+

0.4%Cl-

0.4%

SO42-

3.4%

NO3-

0.8%

CO32-

11.1%

SO42-

17%NO3

-

5.8%

Cl-

0.6%

NH4+

6.2%

Unidentif ied-12.9%

Crustal Material28.7%

Trace Metals0.7%

OC41%

EC13%

Aerosol Chemical Composition Measured in Yulin, China

Dust

Anthropogenic Pollution

Page 11: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

Emissions/AQ Trends: Primary PM2.5

AQ

Emissions

Sources (2001)

Potential Risks and Effects• Heart (arrhythmias, attacks)

• Respiratory (asthma, bronchitis)

• Among elderly and young• Vegetation (ecosystem)

• Buildings, Materials• Visibility

Page 12: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

Other (Inorganic) Secondary PM Formation

Secondary formation is a function of many factors including: concentrations of precursors, other gaseous reactive species (e.g., O3, OH), atmospheric conditions, and cloud or fog droplet interactions.

Gas-to-particle conversion (oxidation)

SO2(g) HOSO3 H2SO4 + 2NH3 (NH4)2SO4

NOx(g) HNO3 + NH3 NH4NO3

Heterogeneous reactions

(R7)

R6)(

R5)(

)4R()(

2422

123

233

322

2222

SOOSO

SOHHSO

HSOHOHSO

OHSOOHgSO

Page 13: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

Emissions/AQ Trends: SO2

AQ

Emissions Sources (2001)

Potential Risks and Effects• Breathing impairment

• Respiratory, cardiovascular {PM}• Precursor for PM

•Acidification (soils, waters)• Corrosion (bldgs, monuments)

• Visibility

Page 14: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

SO2 SO4= in Greater Atlanta for July 2001

34.4

34.2

34.0

33.8

33.6

33.4

33.2

33.0

32.8

32.6

32.4

-85.0 -84.5 -84.0 -83.5 -83.0 -82.5 -82.0

Atlanta

FAQS ASACA sites significant point sources point sources w/ CO:NOx > 1

20x20 km

Griffin

Macon

Augusta

Columbus

N

E

S

W6 12

SO2*3 (ppbv)

SO4= (µgm-3)

WS*2 (m/s)

WD (%)

N

E

S

W6 12

SO2*2 (ppbv)

WS*2 (m/s)

WD (%)

Page 15: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

Emissions/AQ Trends: CO

AQ

Emissions

Sources (2001)

Potential Risks and Effects

• Blood-O2 deficiency

• Cardiovascular (angina pectoris)• Visual, neurological impairment

• Role in P(O3) via HOx cycle (slow)

Page 16: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

Emissions/AQ Trends: NOx (NO+NO2)

AQ

Emissions

Sources (2001)

Potential Risks and Effects• Airway, lung function

• Respiratory illness, infection• Precursor for O3 and PM

•Acid deposition (nutrient loss)• Eutrophication (algae bloom)

• Visibility

Page 17: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

Measuring ions using ion chromatography

Page 18: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

An example Chromatogram (Anions)

Page 19: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

An example Chromatogram (Cations)

Page 20: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

Measuring Elemental and Organic Carbon (EC/OC)

Page 21: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

The Sunset Lab Instrument

Page 22: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

Thermal Evolution Thermalgram

Page 23: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

Estimating Mass Closure

To estimate the mass concentration based on chemical composition:

MT = ∑ions + ∑elements + ∑crustal + ∑carbon

= ∑ions measured +

∑Al*1.9 (Al2O3) + Si*2.1 (SiO2) +Fe*1.4 (Fe2O3)

+ Elemental Carbon (EC) +Organic Carbon (OC)*1.4

Mass Closure = ΔM = Measured Mass- Estimated Mass

Page 24: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:
Page 25: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

Uncertainty Estimation

Root Sum Square Method:

For Example Function:

X=ABm/Cn

2C

2B

2Ax

CnU

BmU

AU

XU

Page 26: Atmospheric Particulate Matter: Chemical Composition and Basics of Concentration Estimation Mike Bergin, Ted Russell, Jim Mullholland, Sangil Lee CEE 6319:

A Simple Example

Mass Concentration = Mass on Filter (ΔM) / Air Volume (V)

M = ΔM / V

ΔM = 100 ug ± 10 ug; V = 1.0 m3 ± 0.1 m3

%140.11.0

10010

MU 22m