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Marine Submicron Aerosols from the Gulf of Mexico: Polluted and Acidic with Rapid Production of Sulfate and Organosulfates

Shan Zhou, Fangzhou Guo, Chun-Ying Chao, Subin Yoon, Sergio Alvarez, Sujan Shrestha, James Flynn, Sascha Usenko, Rebecca J. Sheesley, Robert Griffin

2023Environmental Science & Technology27 citationsDOI

Abstract

We measured submicron aerosols (PM 1 ) at a beachfront site in Texas in Spring 2021 to characterize the “background” aerosol chemical composition advecting into Texas and the factors controlling this composition. Observations show that marine “background” aerosols from the Gulf of Mexico were highly processed and acidic; sulfate was the most abundant component (on average 57% of total PM 1 mass), followed by organic material (26%). These chemical characteristics are similar to those observed at other marine locations globally. However, Gulf “background” aerosols were much more polluted; the average non-refractory (NR-) PM 1 mass concentration was 3–70 times higher than that observed in other clean marine atmospheres. Anthropogenic shipping emissions over the Gulf of Mexico explain 78.3% of the total measured “background” sulfate in the Gulf air. We frequently observed haze pollution in the air mass from the Gulf, with significantly elevated concentrations of sulfate, organosulfates, and secondary organic aerosol associated with sulfuric acid. Analysis suggests that aqueous oxidation of shipping emissions over the Gulf of Mexico by peroxides in the particles might potentially be an important pathway for the rapid production of acidic sulfate and organosulfates during the haze episodes under acidic conditions.

Topics & Concepts

SulfateAerosolEnvironmental chemistryHazeSulfuric acidEnvironmental scienceAir mass (solar energy)PollutionChemical compositionAir pollutionChemistryEcologyInorganic chemistryBoundary layerOrganic chemistryPhysicsBiologyThermodynamicsAtmospheric chemistry and aerosolsAir Quality and Health ImpactsMaritime Transport Emissions and Efficiency
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