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Dive into the research topics where I. El Haddad is active.

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Featured researches published by I. El Haddad.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Gasoline cars produce more carbonaceous particulate matter than modern filter-equipped diesel cars

Stephen M. Platt; I. El Haddad; Simone M. Pieber; A.A. Zardini; R. Suarez-Bertoa; M. Clairotte; Kaspar R. Daellenbach; Rao Huang; Jay G. Slowik; S. Hellebust; Brice Temime-Roussel; Nicolas Marchand; Joost A. de Gouw; Jose L. Jimenez; Patrick L. Hayes; Allen L. Robinson; Urs Baltensperger; C. Astorga; André S. H. Prévôt

Carbonaceous particulate matter (PM), comprising black carbon (BC), primary organic aerosol (POA) and secondary organic aerosol (SOA, from atmospheric aging of precursors), is a highly toxic vehicle exhaust component. Therefore, understanding vehicle pollution requires knowledge of both primary emissions, and how these emissions age in the atmosphere. We provide a systematic examination of carbonaceous PM emissions and parameterisation of SOA formation from modern diesel and gasoline cars at different temperatures (22, −7 °C) during controlled laboratory experiments. Carbonaceous PM emission and SOA formation is markedly higher from gasoline than diesel particle filter (DPF) and catalyst-equipped diesel cars, more so at −7 °C, contrasting with nitrogen oxides (NOX). Higher SOA formation from gasoline cars and primary emission reductions for diesels implies gasoline cars will increasingly dominate vehicular total carbonaceous PM, though older non-DPF-equipped diesels will continue to dominate the primary fraction for some time. Supported by state-of-the-art source apportionment of ambient fossil fuel derived PM, our results show that whether gasoline or diesel cars are more polluting depends on the pollutant in question, i.e. that diesel cars are not necessarily worse polluters than gasoline cars.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2018

Trace Metals in Soot and PM2.5 from Heavy-Fuel-Oil Combustion in a Marine Engine

Joel C. Corbin; A. A. Mensah; Simone M. Pieber; Jürgen Orasche; B. Michalke; M. Zanatta; Hendryk Czech; D. Massabò; F. Buatier de Mongeot; Carlo Mennucci; I. El Haddad; Nivedita K. Kumar; Benjamin Stengel; Y. Huang; Ralf Zimmermann; André S. H. Prévôt; M. Gysel

Heavy fuel oil (HFO) particulate matter (PM) emitted by marine engines is known to contain toxic heavy metals, including vanadium (V) and nickel (Ni). The toxicity of such metals will depend on the their chemical state, size distribution, and mixing state. Using online soot-particle aerosol mass spectrometry (SP-AMS), we quantified the mass of five metals (V, Ni, Fe, Na, and Ba) in HFO-PM soot particles produced by a marine diesel research engine. The in-soot metal concentrations were compared to in-PM2.5 measurements by inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectroscopy (ICP-OES). We found that <3% of total PM2.5 metals was associated with soot particles, which may still be sufficient to influence in-cylinder soot burnout rates. Since these metals were most likely present as oxides, whereas studies on lower-temperature boilers report a predominance of sulfates, this result implies that the toxicity of HFO PM depends on its combustion conditions. Finally, we observed a 4-to-25-fold enhancement in the ratio V:Ni in soot particles versus PM2.5, indicating an enrichment of V in soot due to its lower nucleation/condensation temperature. As this enrichment mechanism is not dependent on soot formation, V is expected to be generally enriched within smaller HFO-PM particles from marine engines, enhancing its toxicity.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018

Brown and Black Carbon Emitted by a Marine Engine Operated on Heavy Fuel Oil and Distillate Fuels: Optical Properties, Size Distributions, and Emission Factors

J. C. Corbin; Simone M. Pieber; Hendryk Czech; M. Zanatta; Gert Jakobi; D. Massabò; Jürgen Orasche; I. El Haddad; A. A. Mensah; Benjamin Stengel; Luka Drinovec; Griša Močnik; Ralf Zimmermann; André S. H. Prévôt; M. Gysel

We characterized the chemical composition and optical properties of particulate matter (PM) emitted by a marine diesel engine operated on heavy fuel oil (HFO), marine gas oil (MGO), and diesel fuel (DF). For all three fuels, ∼80% of submicron PM was organic (and sulfate, for HFO at higher engine loads). Emission factors varied only slightly with engine load. Refractory black carbon (rBC) particles were not thickly coated for any fuel; rBC was therefore externally mixed from organic and sulfate PM. For MGO and DF PM, rBC particles were lognormally distributed in size (mode at drBC ≈120 nm). For HFO, much larger rBC particles were present. Combining the rBC mass concentrations with in situ absorption measurements yielded an rBC mass absorption coefficient MACBC,780 nm of 7.8 ± 1.8 m2/g at 780 nm for all three fuels. Using positive deviations of the absorption Ångström exponent (AAE) from unity to define brown carbon (brC), we found that brC absorption was negligible for MGO or DF PM (AAE(370,880 nm)≈ 1.0 ± 0.1) but typically 50% of total 370-nm absorption for HFO PM. Even at 590 nm, ∼20 of the total absorption was due to brC. Using absorption at 880 nm as a reference for BC absorption and normalizing to organic PM mass, we obtained a MACOM,370 nm of 0.4 m 2/g at typical operating conditions. Furthermore, we calculated an imaginary refractive index of (0.045 ± 0.025)(λ∕370 nm)−3 for HFO PM at 370 nm>λ> 660 nm, more than twofold greater than previous recommendations. Climate models should account for this substantial brC absorption in HFO PM. Plain Language Summary We characterized the fundamental properties of marine engine exhaust that are relevant to its aerosol-radiation interactions in climate models. In particular, we focussed on “brown carbon” light absorption (i.e., absorption in excess of that expected for the black carbon in canonical soot). We found that brown carbon can increase the direct radiative forcing of heavy-fuel-oil ship exhaust by 18% over snow.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2012

Secondary organic aerosol formation from gasoline vehicle emissions in a new mobile environmental reaction chamber

Stephen M. Platt; I. El Haddad; A.A. Zardini; M. Clairotte; C. Astorga; Robert Wolf; Jay G. Slowik; Brice Temime-Roussel; Nicolas Marchand; Irena Ježek; Luka Drinovec; Griša Močnik; O. Möhler; R. Richter; Peter Barmet; Federico Bianchi; Urs Baltensperger; André S. H. Prévôt


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2014

Fossil vs. non-fossil sources of fine carbonaceous aerosols in four Chinese cities during the extreme winter haze episode of 2013

Yanlin Zhang; Rujin Huang; I. El Haddad; Kin Fai Ho; J. J. Cao; Yongming Han; Peter Zotter; Carlo Bozzetti; Kaspar R. Daellenbach; F. Canonaco; Jay G. Slowik; Gary Salazar; Margit Schwikowski; Jürgen Schnelle-Kreis; Gülcin Abbaszade; Ralf Zimmermann; Urs Baltensperger; André S. H. Prévôt; Sönke Szidat


Nature Communications | 2014

Two-stroke scooters are a dominant source of air pollution in many cities

Stephen M. Platt; I. El Haddad; Simone M. Pieber; Rujin Huang; A.A. Zardini; M. Clairotte; R. Suarez-Bertoa; Peter Barmet; L. Pfaffenberger; R. Wolf; Jay G. Slowik; Stephen J. Fuller; Markus Kalberer; R. Chirico; J. Dommen; C. Astorga; Ralf Zimmermann; Nicolas Marchand; Stig Hellebust; Brice Temime-Roussel; U. Baltensperger; André S. H. Prévôt


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2015

Inter-comparison of laboratory smog chamber and flow reactor systems on organic aerosol yield and composition

Emily A. Bruns; I. El Haddad; Alejandro Keller; Felix Klein; Nivedita K. Kumar; Simone M. Pieber; Joel C. Corbin; Jay G. Slowik; William H. Brune; Urs Baltensperger; André S. H. Prévôt


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2015

In situ, satellite measurement and model evidence on the dominant regional contribution to fine particulate matter levels in the Paris megacity

Matthias Beekmann; André S. H. Prévôt; Frank Drewnick; Jean Sciare; Spyros N. Pandis; H. A. C. Denier van der Gon; Monica Crippa; F. Freutel; L. Poulain; V. Ghersi; Edith Rodriguez; Steffen Beirle; Peter Zotter; S.-L. von der Weiden-Reinmüller; M. Bressi; C. Fountoukis; H. Petetin; Sönke Szidat; Johannes Schneider; A. Rosso; I. El Haddad; A. Megaritis; Q. J. Zhang; Vincent Michoud; Jay G. Slowik; S. Moukhtar; Pekka Kolmonen; Andreas Stohl; Sabine Eckhardt; Agnès Borbon


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2013

Primary and secondary organic aerosol origin by combined gas-particle phase source apportionment

Monica Crippa; F. Canonaco; Jay G. Slowik; I. El Haddad; P. F. DeCarlo; Claudia Mohr; Maarten F. Heringa; R. Chirico; Nicolas Marchand; Brice Temime-Roussel; E. Abidi; L. Poulain; A. Wiedensohler; Urs Baltensperger; André S. H. Prévôt


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2016

Characterization and source apportionment of organic aerosol using offline aerosol mass spectrometry

Kaspar R. Daellenbach; Carlo Bozzetti; A. Křepelová; F. Canonaco; Robert Wolf; Peter Zotter; P. Fermo; Monica Crippa; Jay G. Slowik; Y. Sosedova; Yanlin Zhang; Rujin Huang; L. Poulain; Sönke Szidat; Urs Baltensperger; I. El Haddad; André S. H. Prévôt

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F. Canonaco

Paul Scherrer Institute

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