Title

Multiple oxygen and sulfur isotope compositions of secondary atmospheric sulfate in a mega-city in central china

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

12-1-2013

Abstract

Sulfate aerosol is an important atmosphere constituent that can be formed secondarily through the oxidation of sulfur gases. Atmospheric sulfur oxidation can take different pathways depending on meteorological conditions, which affects sulfate aerosol size and composition and therefore local or global climate. The magnitude of 17O enrichment (δ17O) in secondary atmospheric sulfate (SAS) is a tracer for the apportionment of different sulfur oxidation pathways. Atmospheric chemistry-transport models predict a low 17O enrichment (δ17O<1‰) for SAS in mid-latitude continental sites. However, there are few long-term site observations to test the prediction, and data from interior metropolitan sites are entirely absent. We report here multiple oxygen and sulfur isotope compositions (δ17O, δ18O, and δ34S) of SAS collected over a 950-day period in the city of Wuhan, central China, and to compare to data from a similar sampling campaign in the city of Baton Rouge, LA, U.S.A. The isotope compositions of bulk atmospheric sulfate closely reflect those of SAS in Wuhan, with the δ17O ranging from 0.14‰ to 1.02‰, the δ18O from 8.0‰ to 16.1‰, and the δ34S from 2.1‰ to 7.3‰. The average δ17O value at 0.53‰-0.59‰ is consistent with model prediction for continental interior, mid-latitude sites. The Asian monsoon-influenced meteorological condition in Wuhan appears to produce a weak but discernible seasonal pattern for δ17O and δ18O of the SAS. The average rainwater pH value is higher in Wuhan than in Baton Rouge (5.47 versus 4.78) while the two cities have a statistically identical average SAS δ17O value. We suggest that the higher pH does result in a higher fraction of SAS generated by aqueous O3 oxidation, but the resulted higher δ17O value for SAS is diluted by the 17O-normal SAS generated from an enhanced transition-metal-catalyzed O2 oxidation pathway. The enhancement is corroborated with the much higher content of atmospheric particulate matter especially mineral dusts in Wuhan, a point to be considered by future effort to quantify the climate impact of SO2. © 2013 Elsevier Ltd.

Publication Source (Journal or Book title)

Atmospheric Environment

First Page

591

Last Page

599

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