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Science of The Total Environment | 1990

Lead particles in an urban atmosphere: An individual particle approach

W. Van Borm; L. Wouters; R. Van Grieken; F. Adams

In air particulate matter, sampled at a suburban site near the city of Antwerp, Belgium, more than 1500 individual Pb-containing aerosol particles with projected diameters between 0.2 and 15 μm were analyzed by automated electron probe X-ray micro analysis (EPXMA) for 26 elements and morphological features. Laser microprobe mass analysis (LAMMA) was used to detect elements with Z < 11, particularly ammonium compounds. The Pb-containing particles were classified into five main classes: Pb-sulfates, Pb-halides, soil related Pb, Pb associated with medium atomic number elements and Pb associated with high atomic number elements. Each class was divided into several distinct particle types, of which the abundance (in number and mass %), the mean projected particle diameter, and the chemical composition were determined. Auto exhaust products are responsible for Pb-sulfates and Pb-halides, making up respectively 66.7 and 27.8% by mass of the Pb-containing particles. Ammonium sulfate coatings were found to be present on nearly all Pb particles. The observations were correlated with daily concentrations of Pb and Br, obtained by particle induced X-ray emission analysis (PIXE).


International Journal of Environmental Analytical Chemistry | 1990

Laser Microprobe Mass Analysis of Individual Antarctic Aerosol Particles

L. Wouters; Paulo Artaxo; R. Van Grieken

Abstract Individual Antarctic aerosol particles in the 0.5–4 μm aerodynamic diameter range were analyzed using laser microprobe mass analysis (LAMMA). As they were sampled near the ocean, the great majority consists of seasalt, transformed to various degrees in the atmosphere. Major alterations include the association of an excess sulfate and methane sulfonate with these particles. Sulfate-rich particles containing little or no chloride were found mostly in the smallest size fraction (0.5–1 μm), where they account for some 5% of all particles: they are most likely highly transformed seasalt. Aluminosilicates, on the other hand, only appear among the coarser particles: they represent 2% of the particulates in the 2–4 μm range. The remainder of the aerosol consists of organic, Fe-rich, K-rich and Zn-rich particles. The latter groups have very low abundances: always less than 1% of the population of the impactor stage(s) onto which they were collected.


Atmospheric Environment. Part A. General Topics | 1993

Laser microprobe mass analysis of Amazon Basin aerosols

L. Wouters; S. Hagedoren; I. Dierck; Paulo Artaxo; R. Van Grieken

Abstract Individual aerosol particles sampled over the Amazon Basin, Brazil, were analysed using laser microprobe mass analysis (LAMMA). Spectra are complex due to the high organic content of the samples. Phosphate was found to be concentrated largely in one particle type, which was only detected in the dry season samples. This points to a biomass burning origin or at least to a season-related vegetative aerosol production mechanism. The most abundant particle type, most likely originating from a vegetation source, can be described as a mixture of different salts and organic fragments.


International Journal of Environmental Analytical Chemistry | 1988

Characterization of Individual Estuarine and Marine Particles by LAMMA and EPXMA

L. Wouters; P. Bernard; R. Van Grieken

Abstract Laser microprobe mass analysis (LAMMA) was applied to particulate matter from the Atlantic Ocean. Inferring information about the surface layer by LAMMA was not probe X-ray microanalysis (EPXMA). Geochemically relevant groups of particles had been identified by EPXMA and cluster analysis. For both locations, the most abundant ones appeared to be those rich in silicon and the alumino-silicates. Afterwards LAMMA was applied to obtain more information about the trace element composition and surface characteristics. The iron-rich phase appeared to contain significant amounts of heavy metals and of phosphate. Lead appeared to be associated in detectable amounts with alumino-silicates in the Scheldt but not with those in the Atlantic Ocean. Inferring information about the surface layer by LAMMA was not always unambiguous.


Environmental Science & Technology | 1992

Characterization of individual particles in the North Sea surface microlayer and underlying seawater: comparison with atmospheric particles

C. Xhoffer; L. Wouters; R. Van Grieken


Environmental Science & Technology | 1992

Laser microprobe mass analysis of individual North Sea aerosol particles

I. Dierck; Daniel Michaud; L. Wouters; R. Van Grieken


Analytical Chemistry | 1988

Discrimination between coprecipitated and adsorbed lead on individual calcite particles using laser microprobe mass analysis

L. Wouters; R. Van Grieken; R. W. Linton; C. F. Bauer


Environmental particles, volume 1 / Buffle, J. [edit.] | 1992

Characterization of individual environmental particles by beam techniques

C. Xhoffer; L. Wouters; Paulo Artaxo; A. Van Put; R. Van Grieken


Analytical Sciences | 1991

MICRO-ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES FOR THE CHARACTERIZATION OF INDIVIDUAL ENVIRONMENTAL PARTICLES

R. Van Grieken; C. Xhoffer; L. Wouters; Paulo Artaxo


Chemia analityczna. - Warszawa | 1990

Micro-analysis of individual environmental particles

R. Van Grieken; Paulo Artaxo; P. Bernard; L. Leysen; Ph. Otten; H. Storms; A. Van Put; L. Wouters; Ch. Xhoffer

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Paulo Artaxo

University of São Paulo

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I. Dierck

University of Antwerp

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L. Leysen

University of Antwerp

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Ph. Otten

University of Antwerp

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