Estimation of the Monthly Average Ratios of Organic Mass to Organic Carbon for Fine Particulate Matter at an Urban Site

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Abstract

Two independent methods are used to estimate the seasonality of the ratio of fine particulate organic matter (OM) to fine particulate organic carbon (OC) for atmospheric particulate matter collected at the St. Louis—Midwest Supersite. The first method assumes that all of the fine particulate matter mass that cannot be attributed to sulfate ion, nitrate ion, ammonium ion, elemental carbon and metal oxides is organic matter. Using this method, 98 daily samples were used to estimate the annual average fine particulate matter OM/OC ratio to be 1.81 ± 0.07 with a summer average of 1.95 ± 0.17 and a winter average of 1.77 ± 0.13. The second approach to estimating fine particle OM/OC employed OC source apportionment results and estimates of source specific OM/OC, including primary sources and secondary organic aerosol. The OM/OC estimate that was based on 98 daily source apportionment calculations over a two year period yielded an annual average ratio of 1.96 ± 0.03. Methods used in the study yielded a relatively stable annual average estimate of the OM/OC ratio for fine particulate matter in the St. Louis area. The source apportionment results indicate that the similar OM/OC ratio for St. Louis in the summer and winter results from an increased relative contribution of secondary organic aerosol in the summer months that is balanced by the higher woodsmoke in the winter. Although the estimated OM/OC ratios that were determined for St. Louis cannot be directly applied to other locations, the methodologies used to estimate OM/OC can be broadly applied given the necessary data for these calculations. © 2006 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

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Bae, M. S., Schauer, J. J., & Turner, J. R. (2006). Estimation of the Monthly Average Ratios of Organic Mass to Organic Carbon for Fine Particulate Matter at an Urban Site. Aerosol Science and Technology, 40(12), 1123–1139. https://doi.org/10.1080/02786820601004085

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