Wet deposition of low molecular weight mono- and di-carboxylic acids, aldehydes and inorganic species in Los Angeles

被引:95
作者
Kawamura, K [1 ]
Steinberg, S [1 ]
Ng, L [1 ]
Kaplan, IR [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Inst Geophys & Planetary Phys, Los Angeles, CA 90024 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1016/S1352-2310(01)00207-2
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
About 60 rainwater samples were collected at west Los Angeles, California in 1981-1984 and were analyzed for C-1-C-9 monocarboxylic acids (0.33-79 muM, average (av.) 13 +/- 15 muM), C-2-C-10 dicarboxylic acids (2.9.51 muM, av. 7.5 +/- 14 muM) and C-1-C-4 aldehydes (0.85-28 muM, av. 9.2 +/- 11 muM). Distributions of monocarboxylic acids show a predominance of formic (average concentration: 6.5 muM) and acetic (av. 5.6 muM) acids followed by propionic acid (av. 0.44 muM). Oxalic acid is the dominant diacid (av. 3.9 muM) followed by succinic acid (av. 1.0 muM). Formaldehyde (av. 6.9 muM) is the dominant aldehyde, with the next most abundant, acetaldehyde, being minor (av. 0.65 muM). For select rain samples described in this paper, were found to comprise monocarboxylic acids 0.9-12.3% (av. 4.4 +/-3.4%). diacids comprise 1.2-9.5% (av. 4.2 +/-3.3%) and aldehydes comprise 0.2-6.2% (av. 2.1 +/-2.2%) of total organic carbon (TOC, 2.0-18.6 mg Cl-1; av. 9.8 +/-5.4 mg Cl-1). Annual rain fluxes of monocarboxylic acids and aldehydes during 1982-1983 were calculated to be 0.24 and 0.11 gm(-2) yr(-1), respectively, with an annual estimated wet deposition in the Los Angeles Basin of 3120 and 1430 tons, respectively. These fluxes are equivalent to 2500 times of the acids and 2.5 times of the aldehydes emitted from automobile exhausts in the Los Angeles air basin. This comparison suggests that major portions of the carboxylic acids detected in the rain are not directly emitted from auto-exhausts, but are most likely produced in the atmosphere by gaseous and/or aqueous phase photo-induced reactions. (C) 2001 Published by Elsevier Science Ltd.
引用
收藏
页码:3917 / 3926
页数:10
相关论文
共 27 条
[1]   REACTIVE FOAMS FOR AIR PURIFICATION [J].
BRANDER, SM ;
JOHANSSON, GI ;
KRONBERG, BG ;
STENIUS, PJ .
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 1984, 18 (04) :224-230
[2]   CHEMISTRY OF MIST AND FOG FROM THE LOS-ANGELES URBAN AREA [J].
BREWER, RL ;
GORDON, RJ ;
SHEPARD, LS ;
ELLIS, EC .
ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 1983, 17 (11) :2267-2270
[3]   AQUEOUS-PHASE SOURCE OF FORMIC-ACID IN CLOUDS [J].
CHAMEIDES, WL ;
DAVIS, DD .
NATURE, 1983, 304 (5925) :427-429
[4]   Carboxylic acids in the troposphere, occurrence, sources, and sinks: A review [J].
Chebbi, A ;
Carlier, P .
ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 1996, 30 (24) :4233-4249
[5]  
ELLIS EC, 1983, P APCA SPEC C MET AC, P30
[6]   CARBONYLS IN URBAN FOG, ICE FOG, CLOUDWATER AND RAINWATER [J].
GROSJEAN, D ;
WRIGHT, B .
ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 1983, 17 (10) :2093-2096
[7]   FORMALDEHYDE AND OTHER CARBONYLS IN LOS-ANGELES AMBIENT AIR [J].
GROSJEAN, D .
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 1982, 16 (05) :254-262
[8]   ORGANIC-ACIDS OVER EQUATORIAL AFRICA - RESULTS FROM DECAFE-88 [J].
HELAS, G ;
BINGEMER, H ;
ANDREAE, MO .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 1992, 97 (D6) :6187-6193
[9]   Concentrations of monocarboxylic and dicarboxylic acids and aldehydes in southern California wet precipitations: Comparison of urban and nonurban samples and compositional changes during scavenging [J].
Kawamura, K ;
Steinberg, S ;
Kaplan, IR .
ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 1996, 30 (07) :1035-1052
[10]   ORGANIC-COMPOUNDS IN THE RAINWATER OF LOS-ANGELES [J].
KAWAMURA, K ;
KAPLAN, IR .
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 1983, 17 (08) :497-501