Comparison of organic compositions in dust storm and normal aerosol samples collected at Gosan, Jeju Island, during spring 2005. Wang, G., Kawamura, K., & Lee, M. ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 43(2):219-227, 1, 2009. abstract bibtex To better understand the current physical and chemical properties of
East Asian aerosols, an intensive observation of atmospheric particles
was conducted at Gosan site, Jeju Island, South Korea during 2005
spring. Total suspended particle (TSP) samples were collected using
pre-combusted quartz filters and a high-volume air sampler with the time
intervals ranging from 3 h to 48 h. The kinds and amount of various
organic compounds were measured in the samples using gas
chromatography-mass spectrometry. Among the 99 target compounds
detected, saccharides (average, 130 +/- 14 ng m(-3)), fatty acids (73
+/- 7 ng m(-3)), alcohols (41 +/- 4 ng m(-3)), n-alkanes (32 +/- 3 ng
m(-3)), and phthalates (21 +/- 2 ng m(-3)) were found to be major
compound classes with polyols/polyacids, lignin and resin products,
PAHs, sterols and aromatic acids being minor. Compared to the previous
results reported for 2001 late spring samples, no significant changes
were found in the levels of their concentrations and compositions for 4
years, although the economy in East Asia, especially in China, has
sharply expanded from 2001 to 2005. During the campaign at Gosan site,
we encountered two distinct dust storm episodes with high TSP
concentrations. The first dust event occurred on March 28, which was
characterized by a predominance of secondary organic aerosols. The
second event that occurred on the next day (March 29) was found to be
characterized by primary organic aerosols associated with forest fires
in Siberia/northeastern China. A significant variation in the molecular
compositions, which was found within a day, suggests that the
compositions of East Asian aerosols are heterogeneous due to
multi-contributions from different source regions together with
different pathways of long-range atmospheric transport of particles. (C)
2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
@article{
title = {Comparison of organic compositions in dust storm and normal aerosol samples collected at Gosan, Jeju Island, during spring 2005},
type = {article},
year = {2009},
identifiers = {[object Object]},
pages = {219-227},
volume = {43},
month = {1},
id = {2f3d6f5d-9817-318c-9a10-5bdbac460f2d},
created = {2015-02-12T14:35:35.000Z},
file_attached = {false},
profile_id = {81af7548-db00-3f00-bfa0-1774347c59e1},
group_id = {63e349d6-2c70-3938-9e67-2f6483f6cbab},
last_modified = {2015-02-12T14:35:35.000Z},
read = {false},
starred = {false},
authored = {false},
confirmed = {true},
hidden = {false},
citation_key = {ISI:000262956500001},
source_type = {article},
abstract = {To better understand the current physical and chemical properties of
East Asian aerosols, an intensive observation of atmospheric particles
was conducted at Gosan site, Jeju Island, South Korea during 2005
spring. Total suspended particle (TSP) samples were collected using
pre-combusted quartz filters and a high-volume air sampler with the time
intervals ranging from 3 h to 48 h. The kinds and amount of various
organic compounds were measured in the samples using gas
chromatography-mass spectrometry. Among the 99 target compounds
detected, saccharides (average, 130 +/- 14 ng m(-3)), fatty acids (73
+/- 7 ng m(-3)), alcohols (41 +/- 4 ng m(-3)), n-alkanes (32 +/- 3 ng
m(-3)), and phthalates (21 +/- 2 ng m(-3)) were found to be major
compound classes with polyols/polyacids, lignin and resin products,
PAHs, sterols and aromatic acids being minor. Compared to the previous
results reported for 2001 late spring samples, no significant changes
were found in the levels of their concentrations and compositions for 4
years, although the economy in East Asia, especially in China, has
sharply expanded from 2001 to 2005. During the campaign at Gosan site,
we encountered two distinct dust storm episodes with high TSP
concentrations. The first dust event occurred on March 28, which was
characterized by a predominance of secondary organic aerosols. The
second event that occurred on the next day (March 29) was found to be
characterized by primary organic aerosols associated with forest fires
in Siberia/northeastern China. A significant variation in the molecular
compositions, which was found within a day, suggests that the
compositions of East Asian aerosols are heterogeneous due to
multi-contributions from different source regions together with
different pathways of long-range atmospheric transport of particles. (C)
2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},
bibtype = {article},
author = {Wang, Gehui and Kawamura, Kimitaka and Lee, Meehye},
journal = {ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT},
number = {2}
}
Downloads: 0
{"_id":"wqGQHu85hdtrjsDsY","bibbaseid":"wang-kawamura-lee-comparisonoforganiccompositionsinduststormandnormalaerosolsamplescollectedatgosanjejuislandduringspring2005-2009","downloads":0,"creationDate":"2017-01-12T21:32:07.929Z","title":"Comparison of organic compositions in dust storm and normal aerosol samples collected at Gosan, Jeju Island, during spring 2005","author_short":["Wang, G.","Kawamura, K.","Lee, M."],"year":2009,"bibtype":"article","biburl":null,"bibdata":{"title":"Comparison of organic compositions in dust storm and normal aerosol samples collected at Gosan, Jeju Island, during spring 2005","type":"article","year":"2009","identifiers":"[object Object]","pages":"219-227","volume":"43","month":"1","id":"2f3d6f5d-9817-318c-9a10-5bdbac460f2d","created":"2015-02-12T14:35:35.000Z","file_attached":false,"profile_id":"81af7548-db00-3f00-bfa0-1774347c59e1","group_id":"63e349d6-2c70-3938-9e67-2f6483f6cbab","last_modified":"2015-02-12T14:35:35.000Z","read":false,"starred":false,"authored":false,"confirmed":"true","hidden":false,"citation_key":"ISI:000262956500001","source_type":"article","abstract":"To better understand the current physical and chemical properties of\nEast Asian aerosols, an intensive observation of atmospheric particles\nwas conducted at Gosan site, Jeju Island, South Korea during 2005\nspring. Total suspended particle (TSP) samples were collected using\npre-combusted quartz filters and a high-volume air sampler with the time\nintervals ranging from 3 h to 48 h. The kinds and amount of various\norganic compounds were measured in the samples using gas\nchromatography-mass spectrometry. Among the 99 target compounds\ndetected, saccharides (average, 130 +/- 14 ng m(-3)), fatty acids (73\n+/- 7 ng m(-3)), alcohols (41 +/- 4 ng m(-3)), n-alkanes (32 +/- 3 ng\nm(-3)), and phthalates (21 +/- 2 ng m(-3)) were found to be major\ncompound classes with polyols/polyacids, lignin and resin products,\nPAHs, sterols and aromatic acids being minor. Compared to the previous\nresults reported for 2001 late spring samples, no significant changes\nwere found in the levels of their concentrations and compositions for 4\nyears, although the economy in East Asia, especially in China, has\nsharply expanded from 2001 to 2005. During the campaign at Gosan site,\nwe encountered two distinct dust storm episodes with high TSP\nconcentrations. The first dust event occurred on March 28, which was\ncharacterized by a predominance of secondary organic aerosols. The\nsecond event that occurred on the next day (March 29) was found to be\ncharacterized by primary organic aerosols associated with forest fires\nin Siberia/northeastern China. A significant variation in the molecular\ncompositions, which was found within a day, suggests that the\ncompositions of East Asian aerosols are heterogeneous due to\nmulti-contributions from different source regions together with\ndifferent pathways of long-range atmospheric transport of particles. (C)\n2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.","bibtype":"article","author":"Wang, Gehui and Kawamura, Kimitaka and Lee, Meehye","journal":"ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT","number":"2","bibtex":"@article{\n title = {Comparison of organic compositions in dust storm and normal aerosol samples collected at Gosan, Jeju Island, during spring 2005},\n type = {article},\n year = {2009},\n identifiers = {[object Object]},\n pages = {219-227},\n volume = {43},\n month = {1},\n id = {2f3d6f5d-9817-318c-9a10-5bdbac460f2d},\n created = {2015-02-12T14:35:35.000Z},\n file_attached = {false},\n profile_id = {81af7548-db00-3f00-bfa0-1774347c59e1},\n group_id = {63e349d6-2c70-3938-9e67-2f6483f6cbab},\n last_modified = {2015-02-12T14:35:35.000Z},\n read = {false},\n starred = {false},\n authored = {false},\n confirmed = {true},\n hidden = {false},\n citation_key = {ISI:000262956500001},\n source_type = {article},\n abstract = {To better understand the current physical and chemical properties of\nEast Asian aerosols, an intensive observation of atmospheric particles\nwas conducted at Gosan site, Jeju Island, South Korea during 2005\nspring. Total suspended particle (TSP) samples were collected using\npre-combusted quartz filters and a high-volume air sampler with the time\nintervals ranging from 3 h to 48 h. The kinds and amount of various\norganic compounds were measured in the samples using gas\nchromatography-mass spectrometry. Among the 99 target compounds\ndetected, saccharides (average, 130 +/- 14 ng m(-3)), fatty acids (73\n+/- 7 ng m(-3)), alcohols (41 +/- 4 ng m(-3)), n-alkanes (32 +/- 3 ng\nm(-3)), and phthalates (21 +/- 2 ng m(-3)) were found to be major\ncompound classes with polyols/polyacids, lignin and resin products,\nPAHs, sterols and aromatic acids being minor. Compared to the previous\nresults reported for 2001 late spring samples, no significant changes\nwere found in the levels of their concentrations and compositions for 4\nyears, although the economy in East Asia, especially in China, has\nsharply expanded from 2001 to 2005. During the campaign at Gosan site,\nwe encountered two distinct dust storm episodes with high TSP\nconcentrations. The first dust event occurred on March 28, which was\ncharacterized by a predominance of secondary organic aerosols. The\nsecond event that occurred on the next day (March 29) was found to be\ncharacterized by primary organic aerosols associated with forest fires\nin Siberia/northeastern China. A significant variation in the molecular\ncompositions, which was found within a day, suggests that the\ncompositions of East Asian aerosols are heterogeneous due to\nmulti-contributions from different source regions together with\ndifferent pathways of long-range atmospheric transport of particles. (C)\n2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.},\n bibtype = {article},\n author = {Wang, Gehui and Kawamura, Kimitaka and Lee, Meehye},\n journal = {ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT},\n number = {2}\n}","author_short":["Wang, G.","Kawamura, K.","Lee, M."],"bibbaseid":"wang-kawamura-lee-comparisonoforganiccompositionsinduststormandnormalaerosolsamplescollectedatgosanjejuislandduringspring2005-2009","role":"author","urls":{},"downloads":0},"search_terms":["comparison","organic","compositions","dust","storm","normal","aerosol","samples","collected","gosan","jeju","island","during","spring","2005","wang","kawamura","lee"],"keywords":[],"authorIDs":[]}