Authors
Rodney J Weber, Amy P Sullivan, Richard E Peltier, Armistead Russell, Bo Yan, Mei Zheng, Joost De Gouw, Carsten Warneke, Charles Brock, John S Holloway, Elliot L Atlas, Eric Edgerton
Publication date
2007/7/16
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
Volume
112
Issue
D13
Description
The formation of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) in an anthropogenic‐influenced region in the southeastern United States is investigated by a comparison with urban plumes in the northeast. The analysis is based on measurements of fine‐particle organic compounds soluble in water (WSOC) as a measure of secondary organic aerosol. Aircraft measurements over a large area of northern Georgia, including the Atlanta metropolitan region, and in plumes from New York City and surrounding urban regions in the northeast show that fine‐particle WSOC are spatially correlated with vehicle emission tracers (e.g., CO), yet the measurements indicate that vehicles do not directly emit significant particulate WSOC. In addition to being correlated, WSOC concentrations were in similar proportions to anthropogenic tracers in both regions, despite biogenic volatile organic compounds (VOCs) that were on average 10–100 …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
RJ Weber, AP Sullivan, RE Peltier, A Russell, B Yan… - Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 2007