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Título

Geochemistry of PM10 over Europe during the EMEP intensive measurement periods in summer 2012 and winter 2013

AutorAlastuey, Andrés CSIC ORCID; Querol, Xavier CSIC ORCID ; Aas, Wenche; Lucarelli, Franco; Pérez, Noemí CSIC ORCID; Moreno, Teresa CSIC ORCID ; Cavalli, Fabrizia; Areskoug, Hans; Balan, Violeta; Catrambone, María; Ceburnis, Darius; Cerro Garrido, José Carlos; Conil, Sébastien; Gevorgyan, Lusine; Hueglin, Christoph; Imre, Kornélia; Jaffrezo, Jean Luc; Leeson, Sarah R.; Mihalopoulos, Nikolaos; Mitosinkova, Marta; O’Dowd, Colin D.; Pey, Jorge CSIC ORCID ; Putaud, Jean-Philippe; Riffault, Véronique; Ripoll, Anna CSIC; Sciare, Jean; Sellegri, Karine; Spindler, Gerald; Yitri, Karl Espen
Palabras clavepolvo
Europa
silicato
carbonato
mineralogía
Fecha de publicación19-may-2016
EditorEuropean Geosciences Union
CitaciónAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 2016, v. 16, 6107–6129
ResumenThe third intensive measurement period (IMP) organised by the European Monitoring and Evaluation Programme (EMEP) under the UNECE CLTRAP took place in summer 2012 and winter 2013, with PM10 filter samples concurrently collected at 20 (16 EMEP) regional background sites across Europe for subsequent analysis of their mineral dust content. All samples were analysed by the same or a comparable methodology. Higher PM10 mineral dust loadings were observed at most sites in summer (0.5–10 μgm􀀀3) compared to winter (0.2–2 μgm􀀀3), with the most elevated concentrations in the southern- and easternmost countries, accounting for 20–40% of PM10. Saharan dust outbreaks were responsible for the high summer dust loadings at western and central European sites, whereas regional or local sources explained the elevated concentrations observed at eastern sites. The eastern Mediterranean sites experienced elevated levels due to African dust outbreaks during both sum er and winter. The mineral dust composition varied more in winter than in summer, with a higher relative contribution of anthropogenic dust during the former period. A relatively high contribution of K from non-mineral and non-sea-salt sources, such as biomass burning, was evident in winter at some of the central and eastern European sites. The spatial distribution of some components and metals reveals the influence of specific anthropogenic sources on a regional scale:shipping emissions (V, Ni, and SO24 ) in the Mediterranean region, metallurgy (Cr, Ni, and Mn) in central and eastern Europe, high temperature processes (As, Pb, and SO2􀀀 4 ) in eastern countries, and traffic (Cu) at sites affected by emissions from nearby cities.
Versión del editorhttps://acp.copernicus.org/articles/16/6107/2016/
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10261/276776
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.5194/acp-16-6107-2016
ISSN1680-7324
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