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Featured researches published by Hong Geng.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2010

Single-particle characterization of summertime arctic aerosols collected at Ny-Alesund, Svalbard.

Hong Geng; JiYeon Ryu; Hae-Jin Jung; Hyeok Chung; Kang-Ho Ahn; Chul-Un Ro

Single-particle characterization of summertime Arctic aerosols is useful to understand the impact of air pollutants on the polar atmosphere. In the present study, a quantitative single particle analytical technique, low-Z particle electron probe X-ray microanalysis, was used to characterize 8100 individual particles overall in 16 sets of aerosol samples collected at Ny-Alesund, Svalbard, Norway on 25-31 July, 2007. Based on their X-ray spectral and secondary electron image data of individual particles, 13 particle types were identified, in which particles of marine origin were the most abundant, followed by carbonaceous and mineral dust particles. A number of aged (reacted) sea salt (and mixture) particles produced by the atmospheric reaction of genuine sea-salts, especially with NO(x) or HNO(3), were significantly encountered in almost all the aerosol samples. They greatly outnumbered genuine sea salt particles, implying that the summertime Arctic atmosphere, generally regarded as a clean background environment, is disturbed by anthropogenic air pollutants. The main sources of airborne NO(x) (or HNO(3)) are probably ship emissions around the Arctic Ocean, industry emission from northern Europe and northwestern Siberia, and renoxification of NO(3)(-) within or on the melting snow/ice surface.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2011

Single-particle characterization of summertime Antarctic aerosols collected at King George Island using quantitative energy-dispersive electron probe X-ray microanalysis and attenuated total reflection Fourier transform-infrared imaging techniques.

Shila Maskey; Hong Geng; Young-Chul Song; HeeJin Hwang; Young-Jun Yoon; Kang-Ho Ahn; Chul-Un Ro

Single-particle characterization of Antarctic aerosols was performed to investigate the impact of marine biogenic sulfur species on the chemical compositions of sea-salt aerosols in the polar atmosphere. Quantitative energy-dispersive electron probe X-ray microanalysis was used to characterize 2900 individual particles in 10 sets of aerosol samples collected between March 12 and 16, 2009 at King Sejong Station, a Korean scientific research station located at King George Island in the Antarctic. Two size modes of particles, i.e., PM(2.5-10) and PM(1.0-2.5), were analyzed, and four types of particles were identified, with sulfur-containing sea-salt particles being the most abundant, followed by genuine sea-salt particles without sulfur species, iron-containing particles, and other species including CaCO(3)/CaMg(CO(3))(2), organic carbon, and aluminosilicates. When a sulfur-containing sea-salt particle showed an atomic concentration ratio of sulfur to sodium of >0.083 (seawater ratio), it is regarded as containing nonsea-salt sulfate (nss-SO(4)(2-)) and/or methanesulfonate (CH(3)SO(3)(-)), which was supported by attenuated total reflection Fourier transform-infrared imaging measurements. These internal mixture particles of sea-salt/CH(3)SO(3)(-)/SO(4)(2-) were very frequently encountered. As nitrate-containing particles were not encountered, and the air-masses for all of the samples originated from the Pacific Ocean (based on 5-day backward trajectories), the oxidation of dimethylsulfide (DMS) emitted from phytoplanktons in the ocean is most likely to be responsible for the formation of the mixed sea-salt/CH(3)SO(3)(-)/SO(4)(2-) particles.


Journal of The Air & Waste Management Association | 2011

Single-particle characterization of atmospheric aerosols collected at Gosan, Korea, during the Asian Pacific Regional Aerosol Characterization Experiment field campaign using low-Z (atomic number) particle electron probe X-ray microanalysis.

Hong Geng; Fangqin Cheng; Chul-Un Ro

ABSTRACT A quantitative energy-dispersive electron probe X-ray microanalysis (ED-EPMA), namely low-Z (atomic number) particle EPMA, was used to characterize the chemical compositions of the individual aerosol particles collected at the Gosan supersite, Jeju Island, Korea, as a part of the Asian Pacific Regional Aerosol Characterization Experiment (ACE-Asia). On 4–10 April 2001 just before a severe dust storm arrived, seven sets of aerosol samples were obtained by a seven-stage May cascade impactor with a flow rate of 20 L/min. Overall 11,200 particles on stages 1–6 with cutoff diameters of 16, 8, 4, 2, 1, and 0.5 μm, respectively, were examined and classified based on their secondary electron images and X-ray spectra. In general, sea salt particles were the most frequently encountered, followed by mineral dust, organic carbon (OC)-like, (NH4)2SO4/NH4HSO4-containing, elemental carbon (EC)-like, Fe-rich, and K-rich particles. Sea salt and mineral dust particles had a higher relative abundance on stages 1–5, whereas OC-like, (NH4)2SO4/NH4HSO4-containing, Fe-rich, and K-rich particles were relatively abundant on stage 6. The analysis on relative number abundances of various particle types combined with 72-hr backward air mass trajectories indicated that a lot of reacted sea salt and reacted mineral dust (with airborne NOx and SO2 or their acidic products) and OC-like particles were carried by the air masses passing over the Yellow Sea (for sample “10 April”) and many NH4HSO4/(NH4)2SO4-containing particles were carried by the air masses passing over the Sea of Japan and Korea Strait (for samples “4–9 April”). It was concluded that the atmosphere over Jeju Island was influenced by anthropogenic SO2 and NOx, organic compounds, and secondary aerosols when Asian dust was absent. IMPLICATIONS A quantitative energy-dispersive electron probe X-ray microanalysis, called low-Z particle EPMA, was used to characterize aerosol particles collected at Jeju Island, Korea, on 4–10 April of 2001 during the intensive observation period of the Asian Pacific Regional Aerosol Characterization Experiment (ACE-Asia). The particle size distribution and chemical compositions of individual atmospheric particles over Jeju Island were obtained, and many environmentally important atmospheric particles containing sulfate, nitrate, sea salt, alminosilicate, and carbonaceous species in the size range of 0.5–16 μm were characterized. It was found that anthropogenic SO2 and NOx made great impacts on compositions of aerosol particles. The results helped better understand how air pollutants interacted with aerosol particles in the Asia-Pacific region.


Journal of Cleaner Production | 2016

A review of single aerosol particle studies in the atmosphere of East Asia: morphology, mixing state, source, and heterogeneous reactions

Weijun Li; Longyi Shao; Daizhou Zhang; Chul-Un Ro; Min Hu; Xinhui Bi; Hong Geng; Atsushi Matsuki; Hongya Niu; Jianmin Chen


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2013

Investigation of aged Asian dust particles by the combined use of quantitative ED-EPMA and ATR-FTIR imaging

Young-Chul Song; Hyo-Jin Eom; Hae-Jin Jung; M. A. Malek; HyeKyeong Kim; Hong Geng; Chul-Un Ro


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2013

Investigation of aged aerosols in size-resolved Asian dust storm particles transported from Beijing, China, to Incheon, Korea, using low- Z particle EPMA

Hong Geng; H.-J. Hwang; X. Liu; S. Dong; Chul-Un Ro


Comprehensive Analytical Chemistry | 2015

Chapter 11 – Microscopic Single-Particle Analytical Methods for Aerosol Characterisation

Hong Geng; Dhrubajyoti Gupta; Chul-Un Ro


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2018

Single-particle characterization of aerosols collected at a remote site in the Amazonian rainforest and an urban site in Manaus, Brazil

Li Wu; Xue Li; Hye Kyeong Kim; Hong Geng; Ricardo H. M. Godoi; Cybelli G. G. Barbosa; Ana F. L. Godoi; Carlos Itsuo Yamamoto; Rodrigo Augusto Ferreira de Souza; Christopher Pöhlker; Meinrat O. Andreae; Chul-Un Ro


Atmospheric Research | 2017

Characterization of size-resolved urban haze particles collected in summer and winter at Taiyuan City, China using quantitative electron probe X-ray microanalysis

Hong Geng; Chun-Song Jin; Dong-Peng Zhang; Shu-Rong Wang; Xiao-Tian Xu; Xu-Ran Wang; Yuan Zhang; Li Wu; Chul-Un Ro


한국대기환경학회 학술대회논문집 | 2015

Interpretation of Volcanic Signatures from Mineralogical Characterization of Individual Insoluble Particles in an Ice Core of East Rongbuk Glacier at Mt. Everest, Himalayas

Abdul Malek; Hyo-Jin Eom; Hong Geng; Hae-Jin Jung; HeeJin Hwang; Soon-Do Hur; Chul-Un Ro

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