Few measurements of aerosol chemical composition
have been made during the winter–spring transition
(following polar sunrise) to constrain Arctic aerosol–cloud–
climate feedbacks. Herein, we report the first measurements
of individual particle chemical composition near Utqia?gvik
(Barrow), Alaska, in winter (seven sample days in January
and February 2014). Individual particles were analyzed
by computer-controlled scanning electron microscopy
with energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (CCSEM-EDX,
24 847 particles), Raman microspectroscopy (300 particles),
and scanning transmission X-ray microscopy with nearedge
X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy (STXMNEXAFS,
290 particles). Sea spray aerosol (SSA) was observed
in all samples, with fresh and aged SSA comprising
99 %, by number, of 2.5–7.5 µm diameter particles, 65–
95% from 0.5–2.5 µm, and 50–60% from 0.1–0.5 µm, indicating
SSA is the dominant contributor to accumulation and
coarse-mode aerosol during the winter. The aged SSA particles
were characterized by reduced chlorine content with
94 %, by number, internally mixed with secondary sulfate
(39 %, by number, internally mixed with both nitrate and sulfate),
indicative of multiphase aging reactions during transport.
There was a large number fraction (40% of 1.0–4.0 µm
diameter particles) of aged SSA during periods when particles
were transported from near Prudhoe Bay, consistent with
pollutant emissions from the oil fields participating in atmospheric
processing of aerosol particles. Organic carbon and
sulfate particles were observed in all samples and comprised
40–50 %, by number, of 0.1–0.4 µm diameter particles, indicative
of Arctic haze influence. Soot was internally mixed
with organic and sulfate components. All sulfate was mixed
with organic carbon or SSA particles. Therefore, aerosol
sources in the Alaskan Arctic and resulting aerosol chemical
mixing states need to be considered when predicting aerosol
climate effects, particularly cloud formation, in the winter
Arctic.
Revised: March 22, 2019 |
Published: March 20, 2018
Citation
Kirpes R.M., A.L. Bondy, D. Bonanno, R. Moffet, B. Wang, A. Laskin, and A.P. Ault, et al. 2018.Secondary sulfate is internally mixed with sea spray aerosol and organic aerosol in the winter Arctic.Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 18, no. 6:3937-3949.PNNL-SA-136257.doi:10.5194/acp-18-3937-2018