The analysis reported in thiswork has been performed to characterise PM10concentrationmeasured in an urban background site in Lecce (Apulia region, Italy). PM10 concentration and its inorganic chemical composition have been studied using three procedures: a qualitative analysis of the correlation coefficients between the different species and of the crustal enrichment factor; the cluster analysis (CA) and the principal component analysis (PCA). The results of the three procedures are in good agreement. The five groups identified by the CA correspond to the five principal components obtained with the PCA and they reflect the results qualitatively inferred using the two-species correlation coefficients. The CA results helped in putting in evidence a correlation between Ni, V and sulphate that was less evident in the PCA. The relative abundance of V is larger with wind fromtheNNWdirectionswhere themain industrial sites of the region are located. This suggests the presence of anthropogenic inorganic secondary aerosol generated by a common source of V and SO2 that are likely the industrial releases and the ship emissions. The absolute PCA (APCA) allowed the quantitative apportionment of the five components observed: crustal matter (49.5%), secondary inorganic aerosol (24.1%), marine aerosol (6.3%), traffic (16.5%), and industrial (2.1%). Observed PM10 concentration clearly shows a seasonal pattern, opposite to the one observed in the northern and central Italy, with average PM10 larger in the warm season (spring and summer) with respect to the cold season as a consequence of the increase of crustal matter contribution likely due to the intrusion of African dust. These intrusions are more frequent in the warm season and have an influence on daily PM10 concentrations variable between 6% and 120% in this site. Correlation with meteorological data indicates that the more intense cases of intrusions of African dust happen with wind blowing from the SW direction. Average PM10 concentration decreases of about 23% during precipitation. The decrease ismainly due to the decrease in crustal matter contribution and secondary inorganic aerosol. The sum of the other three sources is almost not changing during precipitation.
Characterisation and source apportionment of PM10 in an urban background site in Lecce
GENGA, AlessandraSecondo
;SICILIANO, Maria;GUASCITO, Maria RacheleUltimo
2010-01-01
Abstract
The analysis reported in thiswork has been performed to characterise PM10concentrationmeasured in an urban background site in Lecce (Apulia region, Italy). PM10 concentration and its inorganic chemical composition have been studied using three procedures: a qualitative analysis of the correlation coefficients between the different species and of the crustal enrichment factor; the cluster analysis (CA) and the principal component analysis (PCA). The results of the three procedures are in good agreement. The five groups identified by the CA correspond to the five principal components obtained with the PCA and they reflect the results qualitatively inferred using the two-species correlation coefficients. The CA results helped in putting in evidence a correlation between Ni, V and sulphate that was less evident in the PCA. The relative abundance of V is larger with wind fromtheNNWdirectionswhere themain industrial sites of the region are located. This suggests the presence of anthropogenic inorganic secondary aerosol generated by a common source of V and SO2 that are likely the industrial releases and the ship emissions. The absolute PCA (APCA) allowed the quantitative apportionment of the five components observed: crustal matter (49.5%), secondary inorganic aerosol (24.1%), marine aerosol (6.3%), traffic (16.5%), and industrial (2.1%). Observed PM10 concentration clearly shows a seasonal pattern, opposite to the one observed in the northern and central Italy, with average PM10 larger in the warm season (spring and summer) with respect to the cold season as a consequence of the increase of crustal matter contribution likely due to the intrusion of African dust. These intrusions are more frequent in the warm season and have an influence on daily PM10 concentrations variable between 6% and 120% in this site. Correlation with meteorological data indicates that the more intense cases of intrusions of African dust happen with wind blowing from the SW direction. Average PM10 concentration decreases of about 23% during precipitation. The decrease ismainly due to the decrease in crustal matter contribution and secondary inorganic aerosol. The sum of the other three sources is almost not changing during precipitation.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.