Comparison of temporal features of sulphate and nitrate at urban and rural sites in Spain and the UK

M.A. Revuelta, R.M. Harrison, L. Núñez, F.J. Gomez-Moreno, M. Pujadas, B. Artíñano

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15 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

A seasonal comparison of aerosol secondary inorganic component (SIC) patterns on annual, weekly and daily timescales has been performed at urban Madrid and London and at rural sites in the central Iberian Peninsula and south-eastern UK alongside data for precursor gases. A database from winter 2004 to summer 2011 has been analysed. Results show the dominant processes affecting the formation and evolution of nitrate (NO3-) and sulphate (SO42-) in both regions. In Madrid, photochemistry dominates formation of nitrate, which is mostly locally-generated. Strong thermal decomposition results in very low concentrations in summer. In contrast, in London high nocturnal values suggest the importance of heterogeneous formation processes as well as nitrate condensation at lower temperatures. The seasonal nitrate maximum in the UK is found in late winter-early spring, when the region typically receives the highest input of pollutants transported from mainland Europe. Daily evolution of nitrate in both cities is heavily influenced by meteorological factors. Seasonal sulphate patterns show no obvious trend, except at the Spanish rural site in summer where photochemical formation was apparent. In Madrid, daily SO and sulphate patterns exhibiting maximum concentrations at noon were found in winter. In previous studies this phenomenon was observed for SO in London, where it was explained by the entrainment of pollutants from aloft into the mixing layer. SIC weekend reductions were investigated at the urban background sites of Madrid and London, and in both cities statistically significant fine nitrate reductions of around 20% are found in summer. These values are consistent with the annual reductions observed by researchers in the US. Weekend sulphate reductions occurred in winter, reflecting a clear impact of anthropogenic sulphate in urban environments, in spite of the large reductions in sulphur emissions in Europe in the last decade. Ratios of nitrate and sulphate to oxidant gases and to one another have been calculated for Madrid, and are consistent with a contribution of local formation to sulphate in winter, while in summer a regional background unrelated to urban SO is observed. The strong differences in the behaviour seen in London and Madrid (and the rural sites) emphasises the need to study cities individually and not to extrapolate conclusions drawn in one city to others in different climate/topographic situations.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)383-391
Number of pages9
JournalAtmospheric Environment
Volume60
Early online date7 Jul 2012
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2012

Bibliographical note

Copyright 2012 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.

Keywords

  • Nitrate
  • Sulphate
  • Aerosol
  • Semi-continuous
  • Timescale

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