Distributions of inorganic nitrogen species in atmospheric aerosols over the East China Sea

Jin Hui Shi*, Yun Zhang, Rui Peng Li, Hui Wang Gao, Jing Zhang

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Scopus citations

Abstract

33 total suspended particle samples and 7 size-segregated particle samples were collected over the East China Sea from Nov. to Dec., 2006, Feb. to Mar., 2007 and May. to Jun., 2008. Concentrations of ammonium, nitrate and nitrite in aerosols were measured to investigate their seasonal variation and size distribution. The concentrations of ammonium in aerosols ranged from 2.6 to 646.9 nmol · m-3, with the higher values observed in winter and spring, and the lower values in summer. Nitrate concentrations were from 5.5 to 281.5 nmol · m-3, presenting the seasonal trend of winter > spring ≈ summer. The concentrations of nitrite were very low, less than 0.5 nmol · m-3. The relative contributions of nitrogen species to total nitrogen varied seasonally in some extent. The contribution of nitrate was comparable with that of ammonium in winter, while the contribution of ammonium was the predominant in spring and summer. The size distribution of nitrate presented clear monthly changes. Most of nitrate existed in the fine particles less than 2.1 μm in Nov. to Dec., and it predominated in the coarse particles with the size of 1.1-4.7 μm and 2.1-7.0 μm, respectively, in Feb. to Mar. and May. to Jun.. The size distributions of ammonium in different months were similar, with one peak presenting in the <1.1 μm fine particles. The air mass back trajectories analysis indicated that the distributions of inorganic nitrogen in aerosols were significantly influenced by the sources and transport pathways of air mass. Both high nitrogen concentration per unit atmospheric volume (nmol · m-3) and per unit mass particle (μmol · g-1) occurred when the air mass passed over severe pollution region. Both low concentration in atmosphere and particle occurred when the air mass came from clean marine atmosphere. Lower concentration in atmosphere and higher concentration in particle occurred when the air mass originated from the continent and transported long distances over the sea.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2835-2843
Number of pages9
JournalHuanjing Kexue/Environmental Science
Volume31
Issue number12
StatePublished - Dec 2010
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Aerosol
  • Ammonium
  • East China Sea
  • Inorganic nitrogen
  • Nitrate

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