PM2.5 water-soluble elements in the southeastern United States: Automated analytical method development, spatiotemporal distributions, source apportionment, and implications for heath studies

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Abstract

Water-soluble redox-active metals are potentially toxic due to the ability to catalytically generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) in vivo, leading to oxidative stress. As part of the Southeastern Center for Air Pollution and Epidemiology (SCAPE), we developed a method to quantify water-soluble elements, including redox-active metals, from a large number of filter samples (N = 530) in support of the Center's health studies. PM2.5 samples were collected during 2012-2013 at various sites (three urban, two rural, a near-road, and a road-side site) in the southeastern US, using high-volume samplers. Water-soluble elements (S, K, Ca, Ti, Mn, Fe, Cu, Zn, As, Se, Br, Sr, Ba, and Pb) were determined by extracting filters in deionized water and re-aerosolized for analyses by X-ray fluorescence (XRF) using an online aerosol element analyzer (Xact, Cooper Environmental). Concentrations ranged from detection limits (nominally 0.1 to 30 ng m-3) to 1.2 μg m-3, with S as the most abundant element, followed by Ca, K, Fe, Cu, Zn, and Ba. Positive Matrix Factorization (PMF) identified four factors that were associated with specific sources based on relative loadings of various tracers. These include: brake/tire wear (with tracers Ba and Cu); biomass burning (K); secondary formation (S, Se, and WSOC); and mineral dust (Ca). Of the four potentially toxic and relatively abundant metals (redox active Cu, Mn, Fe, and redox-inactive Zn), 51 % of Cu, 32 % of Fe, 17 % of Mn, and 45 % of Zn, were associated with the brake/tire factor. Mn was mostly associated with the mineral dust factor (45 %). These two factors were higher in warm (dryer) periods that favored particle re-suspension. Zn was found in a mixture of factors, with 26 % associated with mineral dust, 14 % biomass burning, and 13 % secondary formation. Roughly 50 % of Fe and 40 % of Cu was apportioned to the secondary formation factor, likely through increased solubility by sulfur-driven aerosol acidity. Linkages between sulfate and water-soluble Fe and Cu may account for some of the past observed associations between sulfate/sulfur oxide and health outcomes. For Cu, Mn, Fe, and Zn, only Fe was correlated with PM2.5 mass (r = 0.73-0.80). Overall, mobile source emissions generated through mechanical processes (re-entrained road dust, tire and break wear) and processing by secondary sulfate were major contributors to water-soluble metals known to be capable of generating ROS.

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Fang, T., Guo, H., Verma, V., Peltier, R. E., & Weber, R. J. (2015). PM2.5 water-soluble elements in the southeastern United States: Automated analytical method development, spatiotemporal distributions, source apportionment, and implications for heath studies. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussions, 15(12), 17189–17227. https://doi.org/10.5194/acpd-15-17189-2015

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