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Study of present-day sources and transport processes affecting oxidised sulphur compounds in atmospheric aerosols at Dome C (Antarctica) from year-round sampling campaigns

TitleStudy of present-day sources and transport processes affecting oxidised sulphur compounds in atmospheric aerosols at Dome C (Antarctica) from year-round sampling campaigns
Publication TypeArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Year of Publication2012
AuthorsBecagli, S., Scarchilli Claudio, Traversi R., Dayan U., Severi M., Frosini D., Vitale V., Mazzola M., Lupi A., Nava S., and Udisti R.
JournalAtmospheric Environment
Volume52
Pagination98-108
KeywordsAccumulation modes, aerosol, Aerosols, air, Air mass, Ammonia, Ammonium salt, Antarctic plateau, antarctica, article, Atmospheric aerosols, Atmospheric movements, Condensation, Domes, East Antarctica, Fine fraction, Impactors, Indian Ocean, Methanesulphonate, Methanesulphonic acid, MSA, Oceanic area, oxidation, particle size, priority journal, Salts, Sampling campaigns, Sea salt particles, Sea spray, season, Seasonal cycle, seasonal variation, Size distribution, Sodium, Sodium salt, speciation (chemistry), sulfate, sulfur, Sulfur compounds, sulfur derivative, Sulfuric acid, Sulphates, summer, Summer months, Transport pathways, transport process, unclassified drug
Abstract

A year-round study, which was conducted from November 2004 to November 2007, of atmospheric oxidised sulphur compounds (methanesulphonic acid (MSA) and sulphate) was carried out in the east Antarctic Plateau at Dome C (75° 06' S, 123° 20' E, 3220m a.s.l. and 1100km away from the nearest coast). The two sulphur-derived species exhibit a seasonal cycle characterised by maxima in the summer from November to March. Size-segregated sampling performed with Andersen 8-stage impactors revealed that SO 4 2- and MSA have different size distributions in early summer (November) in comparison with mid-late summer (February). In November, the size distribution exhibited two distinct modes, the accumulation (0.4-0.7μm) and the micrometric mode (1.1-2.1μm), which is in contrast to February when only the accumulation mode was observed. The two modes exhibited different speciation; in the finest mode, sulphate and methanesulphonate were present primarily in the acidic form, whereas they were present primarily as sodium or ammonium salts in the micrometric mode. The different size distributions and speciation patterns in the two months are related to different transport pathways from oceanic areas to the central Antarctic Plateau. In the early summer months, air masses came primarily from the Indian Ocean and lingered for a long time over the Antarctic continent. The transport of sulphur compounds is related to sea spray aerosols and the resulting condensation of H 2SO 4 and MSA over sea salt particles to form sodium salts. In contrast, a rapid transport of H 2SO 4 and MSA formed above the boundary layer over oceanic areas leads to higher concentrations of the acidic species in the fine fraction of aerosols reaching Dome C in February relative to other summer months. © 2011 Elsevier Ltd.

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URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84858780796&doi=10.1016%2fj.atmosenv.2011.07.053&partnerID=40&md5=71ba936fe24888bf4413c3af7fb00f20
DOI10.1016/j.atmosenv.2011.07.053
Citation KeyBecagli201298