Assessment of potential source regions of PM2.5 components at a southwestern Mediterranean site

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Abstract

A set of PM2.5 samples (n= 121) collected at an urban background location in Elche (in southeastern Spain) from December 2004 to November 2005 was analysed by particle-induced X-ray emission (PIXE) and ion chromatography in order to provide source identification and potential source locations. Positive matrix factorization (PMF) was used to estimate source profiles and their mass contributions. The PMF modelling identified six sources: aged sea salt (9.2%), ammonium sulphate (40.4%), soil dust related to Saharan outbreaks (13.0%), traffic 1 (18.9%), nitrate aerosol and traffic 2 (5.5%) and local soil dust (6.0%). Potential source contribution function (PSCF) was then used to identify potential source locations. Scarce influence from Mediterranean and European regions was found with the exception of the nitrate source, whose potential source areas were northern Italy and eastern France. Primary source regions for the remaining components (ammonium sulphate, soil dust-related to Saharan outbreaks and aged sea salt) with known mass contributions due to long-range transport have a marked Atlantic and North African location, primarily between Morocco and northwestern Algeria. © 2010 The Authors Tellus B © 2010 International Meteorological Institute in Stockholm.

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Nicolás, J., Chiari, M., Crespo, J., Galindo, N., Lucarelli, F., Nava, S., & Yubero, E. (2011). Assessment of potential source regions of PM2.5 components at a southwestern Mediterranean site. Tellus, Series B: Chemical and Physical Meteorology, 63(1), 96–106. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0889.2010.00510.x

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