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- Title
Multiyear chemical composition of the fine aerosol fraction in Athens, Greece, with emphasis on winter-time residential heating.
- Authors
Theodosi, Christina; Tsagkaraki, Maria; Zarmpas, Pavlos; Liakakou, Eleni; Grivas, Georgios; Paraskevopoulou, Despina; Lianou, Maria; Gerasopoulos, Evangelos; Mihalopoulos, Nikolaos
- Abstract
In an attempt to take effective action towards mitigating pollution episodes in the Greater Athens Area (GAA), precise knowledge of PM2.5 composition and their sources is a prerequisite. Thus, a two year chemical composition data set from aerosol samples collected in an urban-background site of central Athens, from December 2013 till March 2016, has been obtained and Positive Matrix Factorization (PMF) was applied in order to identify and apportion fine aerosols to their sources. A total of 850 aerosol samples, were collected on a 12 to 24 h basis and analyzed for major ions, trace elements, organic and elemental carbon, allowing us to further assess the impact of residential heating as a source of air pollution over the GAA. The ionic and carbonaceous components were found to constitute the major fraction of the PM2.5 aerosol mass. The annual contribution of the Ion Mass (IM), Particulate Organic Mass (POM), dust, Elemental Carbon (EC) and Sea Salt (SS) were calculated at 31 %, 34 %, 18 %, 8 % and 3 %, respectively. However, carbonaceous aerosols (POM + EC) and IM exhibited considerable seasonal variation. In winter, IM was estimated down to 23 %, with POM + EC being the dominant component accounting for 48 % of the PM2.5 mass, while in summer IM was the dominant component (42 %), followed by carbonaceous aerosols 37 %. Results from samples collected on a 12 h basis (day and night) during the 3 intensive winter campaigns indicated the impact of heating on the levels of a series of compounds. Indeed PM2.5, EC, POM, NO3−, C2O42−, nssK+ and selected trace metals including Cd and Pb were increased by almost a factor of 4 during night compared to day, highlighting the importance of heating on air quality of the GAA. Furthermore, in order to better characterize winter-time aerosol sources in the city centre of Athens and quantify the input of biomass burning as a source to winter night-time PM2.5 concentrations, source apportionment was performed. Τhe data can be interpreted on the basis of six sources namely biomass burning (32 %), vehicular emissions (19 %), heavy oil combustion (7 %), regional secondary (20 %), marine aerosol (9 %) and dust particles (8 %). With specific emphasis on night to day contrasts their contributions shifted from 19, 19, 8, 30, 11 and 9 % of the PM2.5 mass during day to 39, 19, 6, 14, 7 and 6 % during night, underlining the significance of biomass burning as the main contributor to fine particle levels during night-time.
- Subjects
ATMOSPHERIC aerosols; AIR pollution; CARBONACEOUS aerosols; SEASONAL temperature variations; BIOMASS
- Publication
Atmospheric Chemistry & Physics Discussions, 2018, p1
- ISSN
1680-7367
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.5194/acp-2018-163