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Airborne particulate-associated polyaromatic hydrocarbons, n-alkanes, elemental and organic carbon in three European cities

Airborne particulate-associated polyaromatic hydrocarbons, n-alkanes, elemental and organic carbon in three European cities
Airborne particulate-associated polyaromatic hydrocarbons, n-alkanes, elemental and organic carbon in three European cities
Total suspended particulate (TSP) samples were collected weekly over a period of one year at four European sites during 1995/6. Two sites were in London—a Central London site (CL, St Pauls Cathedral) and a suburban North London site (NL, Bounds Green); the other two sites were in Porto, Portugal and Vienna, Austria. TSP was collected using a low volume sampler. Organic carbon (OC) and elemental carbon (EC) concentrations were measured using a thermal–optical carbon analyser. Parallel samplers collected TSP for subsequent GC-MS analysis of thirty-nine combustion-associated organic compounds; 16 polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and 23 n-alkanes. OC and EC correlate well at all sites (r2= 0.39–0.65), although the London inter-site correlations were low, suggesting that local sources of OC and EC have a significant influence on local concentrations. Concentrations do not vary widely across the four urban sites, despite the significant differences in urban characteristics. Seasonal patterns of OCEC ratios were similar at the London and Vienna sites, with highest ratios in autumn and winter, and annual mean OCEC ratios were identical at these sites. The Carbon Preference Index (CPI) indicated vehicle emissions to have a stronger influence over particulate concentrations at the Vienna and central London sites; there was a stronger biogenic signature in north London and Porto. In addition, two PAH compounds (pyrene and fluoranthene) previously associated with diesel exhaust, were correlated with OC and EC concentrations at the London and Vienna sites.
1464-0325
890-896
Kendall, M.
8fa1da40-2fb8-4524-ba41-ab98aae5ddf4
Duarte, A.
8e6149bb-2d2e-448c-af75-97935977db27
Rocha-Santos, T.
e77189ca-83eb-46c5-80f8-1cb9b3d04b4d
Hamilton, R.
72e263b1-85bd-4d9e-b97e-498d76e6e771
Williams, I.D.
c9d674ac-ee69-4937-ab43-17e716266e22
Kendall, M.
8fa1da40-2fb8-4524-ba41-ab98aae5ddf4
Duarte, A.
8e6149bb-2d2e-448c-af75-97935977db27
Rocha-Santos, T.
e77189ca-83eb-46c5-80f8-1cb9b3d04b4d
Hamilton, R.
72e263b1-85bd-4d9e-b97e-498d76e6e771
Williams, I.D.
c9d674ac-ee69-4937-ab43-17e716266e22

Kendall, M., Duarte, A., Rocha-Santos, T., Hamilton, R. and Williams, I.D. (2002) Airborne particulate-associated polyaromatic hydrocarbons, n-alkanes, elemental and organic carbon in three European cities. Journal of Environmental Monitoring, 4 (6), 890-896. (doi:10.1039/b203888a).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Total suspended particulate (TSP) samples were collected weekly over a period of one year at four European sites during 1995/6. Two sites were in London—a Central London site (CL, St Pauls Cathedral) and a suburban North London site (NL, Bounds Green); the other two sites were in Porto, Portugal and Vienna, Austria. TSP was collected using a low volume sampler. Organic carbon (OC) and elemental carbon (EC) concentrations were measured using a thermal–optical carbon analyser. Parallel samplers collected TSP for subsequent GC-MS analysis of thirty-nine combustion-associated organic compounds; 16 polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and 23 n-alkanes. OC and EC correlate well at all sites (r2= 0.39–0.65), although the London inter-site correlations were low, suggesting that local sources of OC and EC have a significant influence on local concentrations. Concentrations do not vary widely across the four urban sites, despite the significant differences in urban characteristics. Seasonal patterns of OCEC ratios were similar at the London and Vienna sites, with highest ratios in autumn and winter, and annual mean OCEC ratios were identical at these sites. The Carbon Preference Index (CPI) indicated vehicle emissions to have a stronger influence over particulate concentrations at the Vienna and central London sites; there was a stronger biogenic signature in north London and Porto. In addition, two PAH compounds (pyrene and fluoranthene) previously associated with diesel exhaust, were correlated with OC and EC concentrations at the London and Vienna sites.

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Published date: August 2002

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 53667
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/53667
ISSN: 1464-0325
PURE UUID: f3a1b97d-79c2-4140-944b-4e85090229d5
ORCID for I.D. Williams: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0121-1219

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Date deposited: 22 Jul 2008
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:43

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Contributors

Author: M. Kendall
Author: A. Duarte
Author: T. Rocha-Santos
Author: R. Hamilton
Author: I.D. Williams ORCID iD

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