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  3. Predominance of secondary organic aerosol to particle-bound reactive oxygen species activity in fine ambient aerosol
 

Predominance of secondary organic aerosol to particle-bound reactive oxygen species activity in fine ambient aerosol

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.137063
Date of Publication
2019
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institut für Anatomie...

Author
Zhou, Jun
Elser, Miriam
Huang, Ru-Jin
Krapf, Manuel
Fröhlich, Roman
Bhattu, Deepika
Stefenelli, Giulia
Zotter, Peter
Bruns, Emily A.
Pieber, Simone M.
Ni, Haiyan
Wang, Qiyuan
Wang, Yichen
Zhou, Yaqing
Chen, Chunying
Xiao, Mao
Slowik, Jay G.
Brown, Samuel
Cassagnes, Laure-Estelle
Daellenbach, Kaspar R.
Nussbaumer, Thomas
Geiser, Marianneorcid-logo
Institut für Anatomie, Zellbiologie
Prévôt, André S. H.
El-Haddad, Imad
Cao, Junji
Baltensperger, Urs
Dommen, Josef
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::610...

Series
Atmospheric chemistry and physics
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1680-7316
Publisher
European Geosciences Union
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.5194/acp-19-14703-2019
Description
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are believed to contribute to the adverse health effects of aerosols. This may happen by inhaled particle-bound (exogenic) ROS (PBROS) or by ROS formed within the respiratory tract by certain aerosol components (endogenic ROS). We investigated the chemical composition of aerosols and their exogenic ROS content at the two contrasting locations Beijing (China) and Bern (Switzerland). We apportioned the ambient organic aerosol to different sources and attributed the observed water-soluble PB-ROS to them. The oxygenated organic aerosol (OOA, a proxy for secondary organic aerosol, SOA) explained the highest fraction of the exogenic ROS concentration variance at both locations. We also characterized primary and secondary aerosol emissions generated from different biogenic and anthropogenic sources in smog chamber experiments. The exogenic PB-ROS content in the OOA from these emission sources was comparable to that in the ambient measurements. Our results imply that SOA from gaseous precursors of different anthropogenic emission sources is a crucial source of water-soluble PB-ROS and should be additionally considered in toxicological and epidemiological studies in an adequate way besides primary emissions. The importance of PB-ROS may be connected to the seasonal trends in health effects of PM reported by epidemiological studies, with elevated incidences of adverse effects in warmer seasons, which are accompanied by moreintense atmospheric oxidation processes.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/184626
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acp-19-14703-2019.pdftextAdobe PDF2.02 MBAttribution (CC BY 4.0)publishedOpen
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