11 research outputs found

    Stubborn Aerosol: Why Particulate Mass Concentrations Do Not Drop During the Wet Season in Metro Manila, Philippines

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    Wet scavenging is the most important sink for particulate matter (PM) and is expected to decrease PM concentrations in the wet season. However, Metro Manila, Philippines has highly similar PM mass across seasons despite large differences in seasonal rainfall. It is important to identify factors contributing to seasonally consistent PM mass as these may be present in similar developing megacities besides Metro Manila, leading to PM accumulation and posing significant health risks. We use size-resolved aerosol composition, aerosol optical depth, and meteorological data to reveal that the seasonally consistent PM mass in Metro Manila is due to (1) opposing seasonal cycles of black carbon and water-soluble PM, (2) inefficient scavenging by short rain events (\u3c1 h), and (3) the high frequency (50%) of these short rain events. Water-soluble PM was most sensitive to scavenging within the 0.18ā€“1.0 Ī¼m and 1.8ā€“5.6 Ī¼m size ranges but more clearly for rain events lasting over an hour, pointing to the importance of rain duration for efficient scavenging. We demonstrate that the presence of rain does not imply wet scavenging is taking place efficiently and rain characteristics are critical to properly estimating wet scavenging. In a changing climate, our understanding of factors such as rain duration and aerosol accumulation will become more important for guiding air quality-related policymaking and ensuring sustainable growth in developing megacities

    Sources and characteristics of size-resolved particulate organic acids and methanesulfonate in a coastal megacity: Manila, Philippines

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    A 16-month (July 2018ā€“October 2019) dataset of size-resolved aerosol composition is used to examine the sources and characteristics of five organic acids (oxalate, succinate, adipate, maleate, phthalate) and methanesulfonate (MSA) in Metro Manila, Philippines. As one of the most polluted megacities globally, Metro Manila offers a view of how diverse sources and meteorology impact the relative amounts and size distributions of these species. A total of 66 sample sets were collected with a Micro-Orifice Uniform Deposit Impactor (MOUDI), of which 54 sets were analyzed for composition. Organic acids and MSA surprisingly were less abundant than in other global regions that are also densely populated. The combined species accounted for an average of 0.80ā€‰Ā±ā€‰0.66ā€‰% of total gravimetric mass between 0.056 and 18ā€‰Āµm, still leaving 33.74ā€‰% of mass unaccounted for after considering black carbon and water-soluble ions and elements. The unresolved mass is suggested to consist of non-water-soluble metals as well as both water-soluble and non-water-soluble organics. Oxalate was approximately an order of magnitude more abundant than the other five species (149ā€‰Ā±ā€‰94ā€‰ngā€‰māˆ’3 versus others being \u3cā€‰10ā€‰ngā€‰māˆ’3) across the 0.056ā€“18ā€‰Āµm size range. Both positive matrix factorization (PMF) and correlation analysis are conducted with tracer species to investigate the possible sources of organic acids and MSA. Enhanced biomass burning influence in the 2018 southwest monsoon resulted in especially high levels of submicrometer succinate, MSA, oxalate, and phthalate. Peculiarly, MSA had negligible contributions from marine sources but instead was linked to biomass burning and combustion. Enhanced precipitation during the two monsoon seasons (8 Juneā€“4 October 2018 and 14 Juneā€“7 October 2019) coincided with a stronger influence from local emissions rather than long-range transport, leading to notable concentration enhancements in both the sub- and supermicrometer ranges for some species (e.g., maleate and phthalate). While secondary formation via gas-to-particle conversion is consistent with submicrometer peaks for the organic acids and MSA, several species (i.e., phthalate, adipate, succinate, oxalate) exhibited a prominent peak in the coarse mode, largely owing to their association with crustal emissions (i.e., more alkaline aerosol type) rather than sea salt. Oxalate\u27s strong association with sulfate in the submicrometer mode supports an aqueous-phase formation pathway for the study region. However, high concentrations during periods of low rain and high solar radiation suggest photo-oxidation is an important formation pathway

    Total Organic Carbon and the Contribution From Speciated Organics in Cloud Water: Airborne Data Analysis From the CAMP2Ex Field Campaign

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    This work focuses on total organic carbon (TOC) and contributing species in cloud water over Southeast Asia using a rare airborne dataset collected during NASAā€™s Cloud, Aerosol and Monsoon Processes Philippines Experiment (CAMP2Ex), in which a wide variety of maritime clouds were studied, including cumulus congestus, altocumulus, altostratus, and cumulus. Knowledge of TOC masses and their contributing species is needed for improved modeling of cloud processing of organics and to understand how aerosols and gases impact and are impacted by clouds. This work relies on 159 samples collected with an axial cyclone cloudwater collector at altitudes of 0.2ā€“6.8 km that had sufficient volume for both TOC and speciated organic composition analysis. Species included monocarboxylic acids (glycolate, acetate, formate, and pyruvate), dicarboxylic acids (glutarate, adipate, succinate, maleate, and oxalate), methanesulfonic acid (MSA), and dimethylamine (DMA). TOC values range between 0.018 and 13.66 ppm C with a mean of 0.902 ppm C. The highest TOC values are observed below 2 km with a general reduction aloft. An exception is samples impacted by biomass burning for which TOC remains enhanced at altitudes as high as 6.5 km (7.048 ppm C). Estimated total organic matter derived from TOC contributes a mean of 30.7 % to total measured mass (inorganics + organics). Speciated organics contribute (on a carbon mass basis) an average of 30.0 % to TOC in the study region and account for an average of 10.3 % to total measured mass. The order of the average contribution of species to TOC, in decreasing contribution of carbon mass, is as follows (Ā±1 standard deviation): acetate (14.7 Ā± 20.5 %), formate (5.4 Ā± 9.3 %), oxalate (2.8 Ā± 4.3 %), DMA (1.7 Ā± 6.3 %), succinate (1.6 Ā± 2.4 %), pyruvate (1.3 Ā± 4.5 %), glycolate (1.3 Ā± 3.7 %), adipate (1.0 Ā± 3.6 %), MSA (0.1 Ā± 0.1 %), glutarate (0.1 Ā± 0.2 %), and maleate (\u3c 0.1 Ā± 0.1 %). Approximately 70 % of TOC remains unaccounted for, highlighting the complex nature of organics in the study region; in samples collected in biomass burning plumes, up to 95.6 % of TOC mass is unaccounted for based on the species detected. Consistent with other regions, monocarboxylic acids dominate the speciated organic mass (āˆ¼ 75 %) and are about 4 times more abundant than dicarboxylic acids. Samples are categorized into four cases based on backtrajectory history, revealing source-independent similarity between the bulk contributions of monocarboxylic and dicarboxylic acids to TOC (16.03 %ā€“23.66 % and 3.70 %ā€“8.75 %, respectively). Furthermore, acetate, formate, succinate, glutarate, pyruvate, oxalate, and MSA are especially enhanced during biomass burning periods, which is attributed to peat emissions transported from Sumatra and Borneo. Lastly, dust (Ca2+) and sea salt (Na+/Clāˆ’) tracers exhibit strong correlations with speciated organics, supporting how coarse aerosol surfaces interact with these water-soluble organics

    Particulate Oxalate-to-Sulfate Ratio as an Aqueous Processing Marker: Similarity Across Field Campaigns and Limitations

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    Leveraging aerosol data from multiple airborne and surface-based field campaigns encompassing diverse environmental conditions, we calculate statistics of the oxalate-sulfate mass ratio (median: 0.0217; 95% confidence interval: 0.0154 ā€“ 0.0296; R = 0.76; N = 2948). Ground-based measurements of the oxalate-sulfate ratio fall within our 95% confidence interval, suggesting the range is robust within the mixed layer for the submicrometer particle size range. We demonstrate that dust and biomass burning emissions can separately bias this ratio towards higher values by at least one order of magnitude. In the absence of these confounding factors, the 95% confidence interval of the ratio may be used to estimate the relative extent of aqueous processing by comparing inferred oxalate concentrations between air masses, with the assumption that sulfate primarily originates from aqueous processing

    On the nature of sea salt aerosol at a coastal megacity: Insights from Manila, Philippines in Southeast Asia

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    This study utilizes multiple aerosol datasets collected in Metro Manila, Philippines to investigate sea salt aerosol characteristics. This coastal megacity allows for an examination of the impacts of precipitation and mixing of different air masses on sea salt properties, including overall concentration and size-resolved composition, hygroscopicity, and morphology. Intensive size-resolved measurements with a Micro-Orifice Uniform Deposit Impactor (MOUDI) between Julyā€“December 2018 revealed the following major results: (i) sea salt levels exhibit wide variability during the wet season, driven primarily by precipitation scavenging; (ii) ssNa+ and Clāˆ’ peaked in concentration between 1.8 and 5.6ā€ÆĪ¼m, with Clāˆ’ depletion varying between 21.3 and 90.7%; (iii) mixing of marine and anthropogenic air masses yielded complex non-spherical shapes with species attached to the outer edges and Na+ uniformly distributed across particles unlike Clāˆ’; (iv) there was significant contamination of sea salt aerosol by a variety of crustal and anthropogenic pollutants (Fe, Al, Ba, Mn, Pb, NO3āˆ’ role= presentation style= box-sizing: border-box; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; display: inline-block; line-height: normal; font-size: 16.2px; word-spacing: normal; overflow-wrap: normal; white-space: nowrap; float: none; direction: ltr; max-width: none; max-height: none; min-width: 0px; min-height: 0px; border: 0px; position: relative; \u3eNO3āˆ’, V, Zn, NH4+ role= presentation style= box-sizing: border-box; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; display: inline-block; line-height: normal; font-size: 16.2px; word-spacing: normal; overflow-wrap: normal; white-space: nowrap; float: none; direction: ltr; max-width: none; max-height: none; min-width: 0px; min-height: 0px; border: 0px; position: relative; \u3eNH4+); (v) categorization of samples in five different pollutant type categories (Background, Clean, Fire, Continental Pollution, Highest Rain) revealed significant differences in overall Clāˆ’ depletion with enhanced depletion in the submicrometer range versus the supermicrometer range; (vi) Īŗ values ranged from 0.02 to 0.31 with a bimodal profile across all stages, with the highest value coincident with the highest sea salt volume fraction in the 3.2ā€“5.6ā€ÆĪ¼m stage, which is far lower than pure sea salt due to the significant influence of organics and black carbon. Analysis of longer term PM2.5 (particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter less than 2.5ā€ÆĪ¼m) and PMcoarse (= PM10 ā€“ PM2.5) data between August 2005 and October 2007 confirmed findings from the MOUDI data that more Clāˆ’ depletion occurred both in the wet season versus the dry season and on weekdays versus weekend days. This study demonstrates the importance of accounting for two factors in future studies on sea salt: (i) non-sea salt (nss) sources of Na+ impact calculations such as for Clāˆ’ depletion that typically assume that total Na+ concentration is derived from salt; and (ii) considering precipitation data over a larger spatial domain rather than a point measurement at the study site to investigate wet scavenging

    Contrasting the Size-Resolved Nature of Particulate Arsenic, Cadmium, and Lead Among Diverse Regions

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    This study examines the mass size distributions and crustal enrichment factors (EFs) of arsenic (As), cadmium (Cd), and lead (Pb) for diverse regions: coastal marine (Marina, California), arid mining facility (Hayden, Arizona), arid urban (Tucson, Arizona), free troposphere (Mt. Lemmon, Arizona), and coastal urban (Manila, Philippines). Micro-orifice uniform deposit impactor (MOUDI) measurements revealed several notable features. All sites showed a bimodal profile with a peak in the submicrometer and supermicrometer diameter range except for Manila, which peculiarly lacked a peak above 1 Ī¼m. Enrichment factor analysis revealed contaminated dust at all sites, even the free tropospheric site, with greater contamination in the submicrometer range. The most extensive dataset in Manila allowed for seasonal analysis, which revealed differences among the same species based on seasonally-dependent transport patterns. Sites experiencing biomass burning influence (Manila and Marina) generally exhibited suppressed concentrations and crustal EFs during burning periods presumably because soil emitted from fires is fresh without extensive processing time to become contaminated. These results have important implications for a variety of aerosol effects dependent on aerosol size (e.g., public health, biogeochemical cycling, heterogeneous chemistry) and underscore the importance of accounting for the coarse aerosol mode as more dust emissions are expected in warmer climate scenarios
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