Sources of atmospheric acidity in an agricultural-industrial region of São Paulo State, Brazil


Autoria(s): da Rocha, G. O.; Franco, A.; Allen, A. G.; Cardoso, Arnaldo Alves
Contribuinte(s)

Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP)

Data(s)

20/05/2014

20/05/2014

05/04/2003

Resumo

[1] Surface-based measurements of atmospheric formic acid (HCOOH), acetic acid (CH3COOH), sulfur dioxide (SO2), hydrogen chloride (HCl), and nitric acid (HNO3) were made in central São Paulo State, Brazil, between April 1999 and March 2000. Mean concentrations were 9.0 ppb (HCOOH), 1.3 ppb (CH3COOH), 4.9 ppb (SO2), 0.3 ppb (HCl), and 0.5 ppb (HNO3). Concentrations in sugar cane burning plumes were 1160-4230 ppb (HCOOH), 360-1750 ppb (CH3COOH), 10-630 ppb (SO2), 4-210 ppb (HCl), and 14-90 ppb (HNO3). Higher ambient concentrations of SO2, HCl and HNO3 were measured during the burning season (May-November). Concentrations of SO2 and HCl increased during the evening, and of HCOOH and CH3COOH were lowest in the morning, with peak levels in the afternoon. Ratios obtained between different species showed either nighttime maxima (SO2/HCOOH, SO2/CH3COOH, SO2/HNO3, CH3COOH/HNO3, SO2/HCl and HCOOH/HNO3), daytime maxima (HCOOH/HCl, CH3COOH/HCl and HNO3/HCl), or no clear trends (HCOOH/CH3COOH). Correlation analysis showed that SO2 and HCl were primary emissions from biomass burning and road transport; HCOOH, HNO3 and CH3COOH were products of photochemistry; HCOOH and CH3COOH were emitted directly during combustion as well as from biogenic sources. Biomass burning affected atmospheric acidity on a regional scale, while vehicular emissions had greater impact in urban and adjacent areas. Atmospheric ammonia levels were insufficient to neutralize atmospheric acidity, which was mainly removed by deposition to the surface.

Formato

11

Identificador

http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2002JD002567

Journal of Geophysical Research-atmospheres. Washington: Amer Geophysical Union, v. 108, n. D7, 11 p., 2003.

2169-897X

http://hdl.handle.net/11449/35211

10.1029/2002JD002567

WOS:000182239100002

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Amer Geophysical Union

Relação

Journal of Geophysical Research-atmospheres

Direitos

closedAccess

Palavras-Chave #organic acids #sulfur dioxide #hydrogen chloride #nitric acid #biomass burning #acidity
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article