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Featured researches published by Nico Raes.


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.


Atmospheric Environment | 2005

Fine structure of mass size distributions in an urban environment

Imre Salma; Rita Ocskay; Nico Raes; Willy Maenhaut


X-Ray Spectrometry | 2005

Chemical composition and mass closure for fine and coarse aerosols at a kerbside in Budapest, Hungary, in spring 2002†

Willy Maenhaut; Nico Raes; Xuguang Chi; Jan Cafmeyer; Wan Wang; Imre Salma


X-Ray Spectrometry | 2008

Chemical Composition And Mass Closure for PM2.5 And PM10 Aerosols At K-puszta, Hungary, in Summer 2006

Willy Maenhaut; Nico Raes; Xuguang Chi; Jan Cafmeyer; Wan Wang


Atmospheric Environment | 2009

Characterisation of PM10 atmospheric aerosols for the wet season 2005 at two sites in East Africa

Stelyus L. Mkoma; Willy Maenhaut; Xuguang Chi; Wan Wang; Nico Raes


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section B-beam Interactions With Materials and Atoms | 2011

Analysis of atmospheric aerosols by particle-induced X-ray emission, instrumental neutron activation analysis, and ion chromatography

Willy Maenhaut; Nico Raes; Wan Wang


Proceedings of the XI International Conference on PIXE and its Analytical Applications, Puebla, Mexico, May 25-29, 2007 | 2007

Seasonal variability in atmospheric aerosol levels and elemental composition during 2006 at Uccle, Belgium

Willy Maenhaut; Nico Raes; H De Backer; Anne Cheymol


Proceedings of the 10th International Conference on Particle Induced X ray Emission and its Analytical Applications, 4-8 June 2004, Portorož, Slovenia | 2004

Study of elemental mass size distributions in Amazonia during the LBA/CLAIRE/SMOCC 2002 campaign

Willy Maenhaut; Nico Raes; Jan Cafmeyer; P. P. Artaxo


Proceedings of the XI International Conference on PIXE and its Analytical Applications, Puebla, Mexico, May 25-29, 2007 | 2007

Detailed Aerosol And Elemental Mass Size Distributions During Winter And Summer Campaigns In Ghent, Belgium

Nico Raes; Willy Maenhaut


Proceedings of the XI International Conference on PIXE and its Analytical Applications, Puebla, Mexico, May 25-29, 2007 | 2007

Atmospheric Levels And Elemental Composition of Fine And Coarse Aerosols During Wet And Dry Season Campaigns At Two Sites In Tanzania

Willy Maenhaut; Nico Raes; Stelyus L. Mkoma

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Imre Salma

Eötvös Loránd University

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Rita Ocskay

Eötvös Loránd University

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P. P. Artaxo

University of São Paulo

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Paulo Artaxo

University of São Paulo

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Anne Cheymol

Royal Meteorological Institute

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