Aerosol time-of-flight mass spectrometry (ATOFMS)
instruments measure the size and chemical composition
of individual particles in real-time. ATOFMS chemical
composition measurements are difficult to quantify, largely
because the instrument sensitivities to different chemical
species in mixed ambient aerosols are unknown. In this
paper, we develop a field-based approach for determining
ATOFMS instrument sensitivities to ammonium and
nitrate in size-segregated atmospheric aerosols, using
tandem ATOFMS-impactor sampling. ATOFMS measurements
are compared with collocated impactor measurements
taken at Riverside, CA, in September 1996, August 1997, and
October 1997. This is the first comparison of ion signal
intensities from a single-particle instrument with quantitative
measurements of atmospheric aerosol chemical composition.
The comparison reveals that ATOFMS instrument
sensitivities to both
and
decline with increasing
particle aerodynamic diameter over a 0.32−1.8 μm
calibration range. The stability of this particle size dependence
is tested over the broad range of fine particle concentrations
(PM1.8 = 17.6 ± 2.0−127.8 ± 1.8 μg m-3), ambient
temperatures (23−35 °C), and relative humidity conditions
(21−69%), encountered during the field experiments. This
paper describes a potentially generalizable methodology
for increasing the temporal and size resolution of atmospheric
aerosol chemical composition measurements, using
tandem ATOFMS-impactor sampling