Study on the Vegetative Detritus Contribution to Beijing Urban PM2.5 Using Cellulose as a Marker

Bibliographic Details
Title: Study on the Vegetative Detritus Contribution to Beijing Urban PM2.5 Using Cellulose as a Marker
Authors: DING Yi, ZHANG Ting, DONG Shu-ping, LIU Xian-de, LIANG Han-dong
Source: Yankuang ceshi, Vol 32, Iss 5, Pp 738-746 (2013)
Publisher Information: Science Press, PR China, 2013.
Publication Year: 2013
Collection: LCC:Geology
LCC:Ecology
Subject Terms: atmospheric pm2.5, marker, cellulose determination, vegetative detritus emission, Geology, QE1-996.5, Ecology, QH540-549.5
More Details: PM2.5 pollution raises environmental concern in China and other countries worldwide. The marker technique is regarded as a reliable tool for atmospheric aerosol source tracing. Cellulose can be used as a marker to identify and evaluate vegetative detritus emission to primary aerosols. An analytical method for cellulose in the PM2.5 has been modified because of its low content in PM2.5 and the relative high procedure blank. The method combines an enzymatic cellulose hydrolysis procedure and a GOD-phenol-4-aminoantipyrene determination of formed glucose. The key parameters of the method were optimized as a delignification condition, temperature for cellulose enzymatic hydrolysis, amount of enzyme, pH value and hydrolysis reaction time. The method meets the requirements of cellulose determination of PM2.5 with a detection limit of 0.26 μg/m3. A procedure blank of 36.5 μg glucose was obtained which is significantly lower than 53.8 μg for the previous method. Cellulose in 23 Beijing urban PM2.5 collected from May 15th to June 28th, 2012 were analyzed. The detection rate of cellulose is 96%. The results show that the cellulose concentration in Beijing PM2.5 is (0.573±0.17) μg/m3. The vegetative detritus contribution is 1.37%±0.65% of PM2.5 mass concentration, or 4.4% in average and 9.2% in the maximum of PM2.5 organic carbon, indicating vegetative detritus is a major contributor of urban aerosol organic carbon and has to be considered in source attribution studies. This method provides a new technique for urban atmospheric PM2.5 source identification.
Document Type: article
File Description: electronic resource
Language: English
Chinese
ISSN: 0254-5357
Relation: http://www.ykcs.ac.cn/en/article/id/cdfc27b8-beee-4ec9-94fa-346156561022; https://doaj.org/toc/0254-5357
Access URL: https://doaj.org/article/f3294839b0fd4a36a89a41cce26d89cb
Accession Number: edsdoj.f3294839b0fd4a36a89a41cce26d89cb
Database: Directory of Open Access Journals
More Details
ISSN:02545357
Published in:Yankuang ceshi
Language:English
Chinese