Gasoline emissions dominate over diesel in formation of secondary organic aerosol mass
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
2012
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Bahreini, R. | |
Middlebrook, A.M. | |
de Gouw, J.A. | |
Warneke, C. | |
Trainer, M. | |
Brock, C.A. | |
Stark, H. | |
Brown, S.S. | |
Dube, W.P. | |
Gilman, J.B. | |
Hall, K. | |
Holloway, J.S. | |
Kuster, W.C. | |
Perring, A.E. | |
Prevot, A.S.H. | |
Schwarz, J.P. | |
Spackman, J.R. | |
Wagner, N.L. | |
Weber, R.J. | |
Zotter, P. | |
Parrish, D.D. |
Subject(s)
Series
Geophysical Research Letters
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
0094-8276
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
Language
English
Publisher DOI
Description
Although laboratory experiments have shown that organic compounds in both gasoline fuel and diesel engine exhaust can form secondary organic aerosol (SOA), the fractional contribution from gasoline and diesel exhaust emissions to ambient SOA in urban environments is poorly known. Here we use airborne and ground-based measurements of organic aerosol (OA) in the Los Angeles (LA) Basin, California made during May and June 2010 to assess the amount of SOA formed from diesel emissions. Diesel emissions in the LA Basin vary between weekdays and weekends, with 54% lower diesel emissions on weekends. Despite this difference in source contributions, in air masses with similar degrees of photochemical processing, formation of OA is the same on weekends and weekdays, within the measurement uncertainties. This result indicates that the contribution from diesel emissions to SOA formation is zero within our uncertainties. Therefore, substantial reductions of SOA mass on local to global scales will be achieved by reducing gasoline vehicle emissions.
File(s)
| File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| grl28949.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 2.24 MB | published |