Light
Absorption and Excitation–Emission
Fluorescence of Urban Organic Aerosol
Components and Their Relationship to Chemical Structure
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Abstract
The
present study used a combination of solvent and solid-phase
extractions to fractionate organic compounds with different polarities
from total suspended particulates in Nagoya, Japan, and their optical
characteristics were obtained on the basis of their UV–visible
absorption spectra and excitation–emission matrices (EEMs).
The relationship between their optical characteristics and chemical
structures was investigated based on high-resolution aerosol mass
spectra (HR-AMS spectra), soft ionization mass spectra and Fourier
transform infrared (FT-IR) spectra. The major light-absorption organics
were less polar organic fractions, which tended to have higher mass
absorption efficiencies (MAEs) and lower wavelength dependent Ångström
exponents (Å) than the more polar organic fractions. Correlation
analyses indicate that organic compounds with O and N atoms may contribute
largely to the total light absorption and fluorescence of the organic
aerosol components. The extracts from the aerosol samples were further
characterized by a classification of the EEM profiles using a PARAFAC
model. Different fluorescence components in the aerosol organic EEMs
were associated with specific AMS ions and with different functional
groups from the FT-IR analysis. These results may be useful to determine
and further classify the chromophores in atmospheric organic aerosols
using EEM spectroscopy