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Download fileDistinctive Sources Govern Organic Aerosol Fractions with Different Degrees of Oxygenation in the Urban Atmosphere
journal contribution
posted on 30.03.2021, 15:05 authored by Ruichen Zhou, Qingcai Chen, Jing Chen, Lujie Ren, Yange Deng, Petr Vodička, Dhananjay K. Deshmukh, Kimitaka Kawamura, Pingqing Fu, Michihiro MochidaUnderstanding
how the sources of an atmospheric organic aerosol
(OA) govern its burden is crucial for assessing its impact on the
environment and adopting proper control strategies. In this study,
the sources of OA over Beijing were assessed year-around based on
the combination of two separation approaches for OA, one from chemical
fractionation into the high-polarity fraction of water-soluble organic
matter (HP-WSOM), humic-like substances (HULIS), and water-insoluble
organic matter (WISOM), and the other from statistical grouping using
positive matrix factorization (PMF) of high-resolution aerosol mass
spectra. Among the three OA fractions, HP-WSOM has the highest O/C
ratio (1.36), followed by HULIS (0.56) and WISOM (0.17). The major
sources of different OA fractions were distinct: HP-WSOM was dominated
by more oxidized oxygenated OA (96%); HULIS by cooking-like OA (40%),
less oxidized oxygenated OA (27%), and biomass burning OA (21%); and
WISOM by fossil fuel OA (77%). In addition, our results provide evidence
that mass spectral-based PMF factors are associated with specific
substructures in molecules. These structures are further discussed
in the context of the FT-IR results. This study presents an overall
relationship of OA groups monitored by chemical and statistical approaches
for the first time, providing insights for future source apportionment
studies.