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Source Apportionment of PM2.5 in Florence (Italy) by PMF Analysis of Aerosol Composition Records

An extensive field campaign was carried out in Florence (Tuscany) to investigate the PM2.5 composition and to identify its sources. The scientific objective of this study is providing a reliable source apportionment, which is mandatory for the application of effective mitigation actions. Particulate...

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Published in:Atmosphere 2020-05, Vol.11 (5), p.484
Main Authors: Nava, Silvia, Calzolai, Giulia, Chiari, Massimo, Giannoni, Martina, Giardi, Fabio, Becagli, Silvia, Severi, Mirko, Traversi, Rita, Lucarelli, Franco
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description An extensive field campaign was carried out in Florence (Tuscany) to investigate the PM2.5 composition and to identify its sources. The scientific objective of this study is providing a reliable source apportionment, which is mandatory for the application of effective mitigation actions. Particulate matter (PM) was collected for one year, simultaneously in a traffic site, in an urban background, and in a regional background site. While the use of two filter types (quartz and Teflon) allowed obtaining a comprehensive chemical characterization (elemental and organic carbon, ions, elements) by the application of different analytical techniques, the location of the three sampling sites allowed getting a better separation among local, urban, regional and transboundary sources. During shorter periods, the aerosol was also collected by means of a streaker sampler and PIXE (Particle Induced X-ray Emission) analysis of these samples allowed the assessment of hourly resolution elemental time trends. Positive matrix factorisation (PMF) identified seven main sources: traffic, biomass burning, secondary sulphate, secondary nitrates, urban dust, Saharan dust and marine aerosol. Traffic mass concentration contributions were found to be strong only at the traffic site (~8 μg·m−3, 33% of PM2.5). Biomass burning turned out to be an important PM2.5 source in Florence (~4 μg·m−3), with very similar weights in both city sites while at the regional background site its weight was negligible. Secondary sulphate is an important PM2.5 source on a regional scale, with comparable values in all three sites (~3.5 μg·m−3). On average, the contribution of the “natural” components (e.g., mineral dust and marine aerosols) to PM2.5 is moderate (~1 μg·m−3) except during Saharan dust intrusions where this contribution is higher (detected simultaneously in all three sites). High-time resolution data confirmed and reinforced these results.
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subjects Aerosol composition
Aerosol concentrations
Aerosols
Air pollution
Air sampling
Analytical methods
Apportionment
Atmospheric particulates
Biomass
Biomass burning
Burning
Composition
Cultural heritage
daily samples
Datasets
Dust
Dust storms
Emission analysis
hourly samples
Marine aerosols
Measurement techniques
Mitigation
Nitrates
Organic carbon
Particulate emissions
Particulate matter
Particulate matter sources
PM2.5
PMF
Polytetrafluoroethylene
Resolution
Saharan dust
source apportionment
Studies
Sulfates
Suspended particulate matter
urban aerosols
Urban areas
X-ray emissions
title Source Apportionment of PM2.5 in Florence (Italy) by PMF Analysis of Aerosol Composition Records
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