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Featured researches published by M. C. Facchini.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Overview of the inorganic and organic composition of size-segregated aerosol in Rondônia, Brazil, from the biomass-burning period to the onset of the wet season

S. Fuzzi; Stefano Decesari; M. C. Facchini; F. Cavalli; L. Emblico; M. Mircea; Meinrat O. Andreae; Ivonne Trebs; A. Hoffer; Pascal Guyon; Paulo Artaxo; Luciana V. Rizzo; Luciene L. Lara; Theotonio Pauliquevis; Willy Maenhaut; Nico Raes; Xuguang Chi; Olga L. Mayol-Bracero; L. L. Soto-Garcia; M. Claeys; Ivan Kourtchev; Jenny Rissler; Erik Swietlicki; Emilio Tagliavini; Gal Schkolnik; Alla H. Falkovich; Yinon Rudich; Gilberto Fisch; Luciana V. Gatti

The aerosol characterization experiment performed within the Large-Scale Biosphere-Atmosphere Experiment in Amazonia-Smoke, Aerosols, Clouds, Rainfall and Climate (LBA-SMOCC) field experiment carried out in Rondonia, Brazil, in the period from September to November 2002 provides a unique data set of size-resolved chemical composition of boundary layer aerosol over the Amazon Basin from the intense biomass-burning period to the onset of the wet season. Three main periods were clearly distinguished on the basis of the PM10 concentration trend during the experiment: (1) dry period, with average PM10 well above 50 mu g m(-3); (2) transition period, during which the 24-hour-averaged PM10 never exceeded 40 mu g m(-3) and never dropped below 10 mg m(-3); (3) and wet period, characterized by 48-hour-averaged concentrations of PM10 below 12 mu g m(-3) and sometimes as low as 2 mu g m(-3). The trend of PM10 reflects that of CO concentration and can be directly linked to the decreasing intensity of the biomass- burning activities from September through November, because of the progressive onset of the wet season. Two prominent aerosol modes, in the submicron and supermicron size ranges, were detected throughout the experiment. Dry period size distributions are dominated by the fine mode, while the fine and coarse modes show almost the same concentrations during the wet period. The supermicron fraction of the aerosol is composed mainly of primary particles of crustal or biological origin, whereas submicron particles are produced in high concentrations only during the biomass-burning periods and are mainly composed of organic material, mostly water-soluble, and similar to 10% of soluble inorganic salts, with sulphate as the major anion. Size-resolved average aerosol chemical compositions are reported for the dry, transition, and wet periods. However, significant variations in the aerosol composition and concentrations were observed within each period, which can be classified into two categories: (1) diurnal oscillations, caused by the diurnal cycle of the boundary layer and the different combustion phase active during day (flaming) or night (smouldering); and (2) day-to-day variations, due to alternating phases of relatively wet and dry conditions. In a second part of the study, three subperiods representative of the conditions occurring in the dry, transition, and wet periods were isolated to follow the evolution of the aerosol chemical composition as a function of changes in rainfall rate and in the strength of the sources of particulate matter. The chemical data set provided by the SMOCC field experiment will be useful to characterize the aerosol hygroscopic properties and the ability of the particles to act as cloud condensation nuclei.


Journal of Atmospheric Chemistry | 1994

The Kleiner Feldberg Cloud Experiment 1990. An overview

Wolfram Wobrock; D. Schell; R. Maser; W. Jaeschke; H.-W. Georgii; W. Wieprecht; B. G. Arends; J. J. Möls; G. P. A. Kos; S. Fuzzi; M. C. Facchini; G. Orsi; A. Berner; I. Solly; C. Kruisz; I. B. Svenningsson; Alfred Wiedensohler; Hans-Christen Hansson; John A. Ogren; Kevin J. Noone; A. Hallberg; S. Pahl; T. Schneider; P. Winkler; W. Winiwarter; R.N. Colvile; T. W. Choularton; Andrea I. Flossmann; Stephan Borrmann

An overview is given of the Kleiner Feldberg cloud experiment performed from 27 October until 13 November 1990. The experiment was carried out by numerous European research groups as a joint effort within the EUROTRAC-GCE project in order to study the interaction of cloud droplets with atmospheric trace constituents. After a description of the observational site and the measurements which were performed, the general cloud formation mechanisms encountered during the experiment are discussed. Special attention is given here to the process of moist adiabatic lifting. Furthermore, an overview is given regarding the pollutant levels in the gas phase, the particulate and the liquid phase, and some major findings are presented with respect to the experimental objectives. Finally, a first comparison attempts to put the results obtained during this campaign into perspective with the previous GCE field campaign in the Po Valley.


Atmospheric Environment | 1997

Night-time formation and occurrence of new particles associated with orographic clouds

Alfred Wiedensohler; Hans-Christen Hansson; D. Orsini; Manfred Wendisch; F. Wagner; Keith N. Bower; T. W. Chourlarton; M. Wells; M. Parkin; K. Acker; W. Wieprecht; M. C. Facchini; J. A. Lind; S. Fuzzi; B. G. Arends; Markku Kulmala

Abstract The formation and occurrence of new ultrafine aerosol particles were studied in association with an orographic cloud during a field experiment at Great Dun Fell (GDF), Northern England. Three size spectrometers to measure submicrometer aerosol particles were located upwind, on top, and downwind of GDF Summit to investigate changes in the aerosol size distribution. During two night-time cloud periods, ultrafine particles were observed downwind of the hill while no particles were detected upwind of the hill. During one cloud event, there was some evidence of entrainment. In this case, the occurrence of ultrafine particles may have been due to entrainment from aloft or by homogenous nucleation downwind of the hill. During the other cloud event, the formation of an ultrafine particle mode (nucleation mode) occurred probably after the cloud passage. There was no evidence of entrainment during this time period. Multicomponent homogeneous nucleation models were used to simulate the formation of new particle downwind of an orographic cloud. Possible homogeneous nucleation processes for this could be the formation of sulphuric acid or ammonium chloride due to outgassing of hydrochloric acid. It was not possible, however, to simulate formation rates of new particles as observed downwind the hill using a model for the binary or ternary homogeneous nucleation process of ammonia and hydrochloric acid. During the first event with high sulphur dioxide concentrations, the formation of new particle via binary homogeneous nucleation of sulphuric acid and water could be only predicted using a high nighttime hydroxyl radical concentration. No formation of sulphuric acid particle could be simulated during the second event with low sulphur dioxide concentrations.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2011

Primary and secondary marine organic aerosols over the North Atlantic Ocean during the MAP experiment

Stefano Decesari; E. Finessi; M. Rinaldi; M. Paglione; S. Fuzzi; Euripides G. Stephanou; T. Tziaras; Apostolos Spyros; Darius Ceburnis; Colin D. O'Dowd; M. Dall'Osto; Roy M. Harrison; J. D. Allan; Hugh Coe; M. C. Facchini

[1] The organic chemical composition of atmospheric submicron particles in the marine boundary layer was characterized over the northeast Atlantic Ocean in summer 2006, during the season of phytoplankton blooms, in the frame of the Marine Aerosol Production (MAP) experiment. First measurements of water‐insoluble organic carbon (WIOC) in marine aerosol particles by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy showed that it is structurally similar to lipids, resembling the organic fraction of sea spray formed during bubble‐bursting experiments. The composition of the water‐soluble organic carbon (WSOC) fraction was investigated by liquid chromatography – mass spectrometry and by 1D‐ and 2D‐NMR spectroscopy, and showed a less hydrophilic fraction containing traces of fatty acids and rich of alkanoic acids formed by lipid degradation, and a more hydrophilic fraction, containing more functionalized species encompassing short‐chain aliphatic acids and sulfate esters of hydroxyl‐carboxylic acids. The more oxidized fraction of WSOC accounts for the oxidized organic aerosol components, which can form by either gas‐to‐particle conversion or extensive chemical aging of lipid‐containing primary particles, as also suggested by the parallel measurements using online mass spectrometric techniques (presented in a companion paper), showing oxidized organic substances internally mixed with sea salt particles. These measurements are also compared with online measurements using an Aerosol Time‐Of‐Flight Mass Spectrometer (ATOFMS) and Aerodyne Aerosol Mass Spectrometer (AMS). Given the large variability in the chemical composition of marine organic aerosol particles, a multitechnique approach is recommended to reduce method‐dependent categorizations and oversimplifications and to improve the comparability with the results obtained in different oceanic areas.


Atmospheric Environment | 1997

Experimental evidence for in-cloud production of aerosol sulphate

P. Laj; S. Fuzzi; M. C. Facchini; G. Orsi; A. Berner; C. Kruisz; Wolfram Wobrock; A. Hallberg; Keith N. Bower; Martin Gallagher; K.M. Beswick; R.N. Colvile; T. W. Choularton; P. Nason; B.M.R. Jones

Abstract The modification of physical and chemical properties of aerosols passing through clouds has received considerable attention over recent years. Some of these transformations are related to in-cloud chemical reactions, particularly the oxidation of sulphur dioxide (SO 2 ) to sulphate (SO 4 2− . The Great Dun Fell experiment provided an opportunity to investigate the connection between the chemistry within cloud droplets and the processing of an aerosol population. We have noted significant increases in SO 4 2− in the aerosol population downstream of the cloud compared to the aerosol entering the cloud. These increases are connected to both S(IV) oxidation in the liquid phase and to the entrainment of new air into the cloud, supplying reactants such as H 2 O 2 to the system. The addition of SO 4 2− mass to the aerosol is also associated with changes in the NH 4 + aerosol concentrations, possibly as a result of neutralisation of the acidified cloud droplets by NH 3 . The study was performed taking into account dynamical mixing of air masses as well as possible sampling artefacts.


Atmospheric Environment | 1997

Cloud processing of soluble gases

P. Laj; S. Fuzzi; M. C. Facchini; J. A. Lind; G. Orsi; M. Preiss; R. Maser; W. Jaeschke; E. Seyffer; K. Acker; W. Wieprecht; Detlev Möller; B. G. Arends; J. J. Möls; R.N. Colvile; Martin Gallagher; K.M. Beswick; K.J. Hargreaves; Robert Storeton-West; Mark A. Sutton

Abstract Experimental data from the Great Dun Fell Cloud Experiment 1993 were used to investigate interactions between soluble gases and cloud droplets. Concentrations of H 2 O 2 , SO 2 , CH 3 COOOH, HCOOH, and HCHO were monitored at different sites within and downwind of a hill cap cloud and their temporal and spatial evolution during several cloud events was investigated. Significant differences were found between in-cloud and out-of-cloud concentrations, most of which could not be explained by simple dissolution into cloud droplets. Concentration patterns were analysed in relation to the chemistry of cloud droplets and the gas/liquid equilibrium. Soluble gases do not undergo similar behaviour: CH 3 COOH simply dissolves in the aqueous phase and is outgassed upon cloud dissipation; instead, SO 2 is consumed by its reaction with H 2 O 2 . The behaviour of HCOOH is more complex because there is evidence for in-cloud chemical production. The formation of HCOOH interferes with the odd hydrogen cycle by enhancing the liquid-phase production of H 2 O 2 . The H 2 O 2 concentration in cloud therefore results from the balance of consumption by oxidation of SO 2 in-cloud production, and the rate by which it is supplied to the system by entrainment of new air into the clouds.


Atmospheric Environment | 1997

The size-dependent chemical composition of cloud droplets

D. Schell; Wolfram Wobrock; R. Maser; M. Preiss; W. Jaeschke; H.-W. Georgii; Martin Gallagher; Keith N. Bower; K.M. Beswick; S. Pahl; M. C. Facchini; S. Fuzzi; Alfred Wiedensohler; Hans-Christen Hansson; Manfred Wendisch

Abstract Size-dependent cloud droplet solute concentrations were measured using a two-stage fog water impactor at the summit station of Great Dun Fell (GDF) in the north of England. The measurements showed mostly higher concentrations in the small-droplet fraction. During one cloud event, however, higher solute concentrations were found in the larger-droplet fraction. In order to identify the factors governing the size dependence of cloud droplet solute concentrations, sensitivity studies by means of a diffusional growth model were performed. The time available for the droplets to grow was identified to be of great importance for the size dependence of solute concentrations. In cases when higher solute concentrations were found in the fraction containing the bigger droplets, the cloud droplets were relatively young having been formed by orographic lifting of the air at the GDF summit. For the other events the evidence indicates that the cloud was already formed far upwind from the summit site. Our experimental and model results imply that, after an initially strong decrease of solute concentrations with droplet size we would observe: • ⊎|increasing solute concentrations with increasing diameters during the initial stage of a cloud, e.g. near cloud base where the droplets have just been formed. The primary factors contributing to this behaviour are high peak supersaturations, large numbers of coarse aerosol particles, and high solubility of the aerosol particles. • ⊎|decreasing solute concentrations with increasing diameters in aged cloud parcels, such as those which can be observed high above the cloud base in cumuliform clouds or are advected to the observation point in the case of stratiform clouds. The primary factors contributing to this behaviour are low peak supersaturations, low numbers of coarse particles, and low solubility of the aerosol particles.


Atmospheric Environment | 1997

Observations and modelling of the processing of aerosol by a hill cap cloud

Keith N. Bower; T. W. Choularton; Martin Gallagher; R.N. Colvile; M. Wells; K.M. Beswick; Alfred Wiedensohler; Hans-Christen Hansson; Birgitta Svenningsson; Erik Swietlicki; Manfred Wendisch; A. Berner; C. Kruisz; P. Laj; M. C. Facchini; S. Fuzzi; M. Bizjak; G. J. Dollard; B.M.R. Jones; K. Acker; W. Wieprecht; M. Preiss; Mark A. Sutton; K.J. Hargreaves; Robert Storeton-West; J.N. Cape; B. G. Arends

Abstract Observations are presented of the aerosol size distribution both upwind and downwind of the Great Dun Fell cap cloud. Simultaneous measurements of the cloud microphysics and cloud chemistry, and of the chemical composition of the aerosol both upwind and downwind of the hill were made along with measurements of sulphur dioxide, hydrogen peroxide and ozone. These observations are used for initialisation of, and for comparison with the predictions of a model of the air flow, cloud microphysics and cloud chemistry of the system. A broad droplet size distribution is often observed near to the hill summit, seemingly produced as a result of a complex supersaturation profile and by mixing between parcels with different ascent trajectories. The model generates several supersaturation peaks as the airstream ascends over the complex terrain, activating increasing numbers of droplets. In conditions where sulphate production in-cloud (due to the oxidation of S(IV) by hydrogen peroxide and ozone) is observed, there is a marked effect on the chemical evolution of the aerosol particles on which the droplets form. When sulphate production occurs, a significant modification of the aerosol size distribution and hygroscopic properties is both predicted and observed. The addition of sulphate mass to those aerosol particles nucleation scavenged by the cloud generally increases the ease with which they are subsequently able to act as cloud condensation nuclei (CCN). Often, this will lead to an increase in the number of CCN available for subsequent cloud formation, although this latter effect is shown to be strongly dependent upon the activation history of the droplets and the concentration of pollutant gases present in the interstitial air. Situations are also identified where cloud processing could lead to a reduction in the capacity of smaller aerosol to act as CCN.


Journal of Atmospheric Chemistry | 1994

Henry’s Law and the Behavior of Weak Acids and Bases in Fog and Cloud

W. Winiwarter; H. Fierlinger; Hans Puxbaum; M. C. Facchini; B. G. Arends; S. Fuzzi; D. Schell; U. Kaminski; S. Pahl; T. Schneider; A. Berner; I. Solly; C. Kruisz

Experimental data from two field experiments on ground based clouds were used to study the distribution of formic acid, acetic acid, ammonia and S(IV) species between liquid and gas phase. The ratio of the concentrations of these compounds between the phases during concurrent measurements was compared to ratios expected according to Henrys law (considering the pH influence). Large discrepancies of several orders of magnitude were seen. Three hypotheses have been investigated to explain the observed discrepancies: The existence of a microscale equilibrium which does not persist in a bulk sample, a thermodynamic shift of the equilibrium due to competing reactions, and nonequilibrium conditions due to mass transfer limitations. Approximate quantitative calculations show that none of these hypotheses is sufficient to explain all of the discrepancies, so a combination of different effects seems to be responsible for this observation. The same theoretical considerations also suggest that mass transfer limitation may be an important factor for highly soluble compounds. The data presented here indicates that it is not possible to simply extrapolate interstitial gas phase composition from measured bulk liquid phase concentrations of a fog or cloud.


Journal of Atmospheric Chemistry | 1994

Multiphase chemistry and acidity of clouds at Kleiner Feldberg

S. Fuzzi; M. C. Facchini; D. Schell; Wolfram Wobrock; P. Winkler; B. G. Arends; M. Kessel; J. J. Möls; S. Pahl; T. Schneider; A. Berner; I. Solly; C. Kruisz; M. Kalina; H. Fierlinger; A. Hallberg; P. Vitali; L. Santoli; G. Tigli

The chemistry of cloud multiphase systems was studied within the Kleiner Feldberg Cloud Experiment 1990. The clouds encountered during this experimental campaign could be divided into two categories according to the origin of air masses in which the clouds formed. From the chemical point of view, clouds passing the sampling site during the first period of the campaign (26 October-4 November) were characterized by lower pollutant loading and higher pH, as compared to clouds during the final period of the experimental campaign (10–13 November). The study of multiphase partitioning of the main chemical constituents of the cloud systems and of atmospheric acidity within the multiphase systems themselves (gas + interstitial aerosol + liquid droplets) are presented in this paper. A general lack of gaseous NH3 was found in these cloud systems, which caused a lack of buffer capacity toward acid addition. Evidence supports the hypothesis that the higher acidity of the cloud systems during this final period of the campaign was due to input of HNO3. Our measurements, however, could not determine whether the observed input was due to scavenging of gaseous HNO3 from the air feeding into the cloud, or to heterogeneous HNO3 formation via NO2 oxidation by O3 to NO3 and N2O5. Sulfate in cloud droplets mainly originated from aerosol SO42− scavenging, since S(IV) to S(VI) liquid phase conversion was inhibited due to both lack of H2O2 and low pH of cloud droplets, which made O3 and metal catalyzed S(IV) oxidation inefficient.

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Dive into the M. C. Facchini's collaboration.

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S. Fuzzi

National Research Council

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M. Rinaldi

National Research Council

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Colin D. O'Dowd

National University of Ireland

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C. Carbone

National Research Council

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E. Finessi

National Research Council

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M. Paglione

National Research Council

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Darius Ceburnis

National University of Ireland

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L. Giulianelli

National Research Council

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