4.5 Article

Mass Concentration, Chemical Composition, and Source Characteristics of PM2.5 in a Plateau Slope City in Southwest China

Journal

ATMOSPHERE
Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/atmos12050611

Keywords

PM2.5; PCA; backward trajectories; chemical composition; source

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Projects of China [2019YFC0214405]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21966016, 21667014]

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The study investigated the chemical characteristics and sources of PM2.5 in Wenshan, revealing that secondary inorganic aerosols are the major contributors to PM2.5, and elements from anthropogenic sources have a high proportion in PM2.5. The research provides effective support for local governments in formulating air pollution control policies.
In order to investigate the seasonal variations in the chemical characteristics of PM2.5 at the plateau slope of a mountain city in southwest China, 178 PM2.5 filters (89 quartz and 89 Teflon samples for PM2.5) were collected to sample the urban air of Wenshan in spring and autumn 2016 at three sites. The mass concentrations, water-soluble inorganic ions, organic and inorganic carbon concentrations, and inorganic elements constituting PM2.5 were determined, principal component analysis was used to identify potential sources of PM2.5, and the backward trajectory model was used to calculate the contribution of the long-distance transmission of air particles to the Wenshan area. The average concentration of PM2.5 in spring and autumn was 44.85 +/- 10.99 mu g/m(3). Secondary inorganic aerosols contributed 21.82% and 16.50% of the total PM2.5 in spring and autumn, respectively. The daily mean value of OC/EC indicated that the measured SOC content was generated by the photochemical processes active during the sampling days. However, elements from anthropogenic sources (Ti, Si, Ca, Fe, Al, K, Mg, Na, Sb, Zn, P, Pb, Mn, As and Cu) accounted for 99.38% and 99.24% of the total inorganic elements in spring and autumn, respectively. Finally, source apportionment showed that SIA, dust, industry, biomass burning, motor vehicle emissions and copper smelting emissions constituted the major components in Wenshan. This study is the first to investigate the chemical characterizations and sources of PM2.5 in Wenshan, and it provides effective support for local governments formulating air pollution control policies.

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