Between 23 August and 18 September 2000, a single-ultrafine-particle mass spectrometer (RSMS-II) was deployed just east of Houston as part of a sampling intensive during the Houston Supersite Experiment. The sampling site was located just north of the major industrial emission sources. RSMS-II, which simultaneously measures the aerodynamic size and composition of individual ultrafine aerosols, is well suited to resolving some of the chemistry associated with secondary particle formation. Roughly 27,000 aerosol mass spectra were acquired during the intensive period. These were classified and labeled based on the spectral peak patterns using the neural networks algorithm, ART-2a. The frequency of occurrence of each particle class was correlated with time and wind direction. Some classes were present continuously, while others appeared intermittently or for very short time durations. The most frequently detected species at the site were potassium and silicon, with lesser amounts of organics and heavier metals.
CITATION STYLE
Phares, D. J., Rhoades, K. P., Johnston, M. V., & Wexler, A. S. (2003). Size-resolved ultrafine particle composition analysis 2. Houston. Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 108(7). https://doi.org/10.1029/2001jd001212
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.