Ultrafiltration to characterize PM2.5 water-soluble iron and its sources in an urban environment
2022
Yang, Yuhan | Weber, Rodney J.
Soluble forms of transition metals in airborne particles are linked to adverse health impacts. Iron (Fe) is often the most abundant transition metal in ambient PM₂.₅. In Atlanta, the water-soluble fraction of Fe had a stronger association with adverse cardiovascular outcomes than PM₂.₅ mass and total Fe. Water solubility is operationally defined. One determining factor is the pore size in the liquid filtration (0.45 μm in this study) used to isolate water-soluble species, implying colloidal particles smaller than the pore size may be included in the water-soluble group. Here, we characterize the properties of PM₂.₅ water-soluble iron (WS Fe) utilizing ultrafiltration and investigate sources of the various isolated fractions based on one-year of samples collected in urban Atlanta (N = 355). Annual average Fe solubility (WS Fe divided by total Fe) was 12%, with the highest solubility in the warm season (May–Sept.) when aerosol acidity (pH of 1.8–2.7) and oxalate concentrations were highest. Ultrafiltration showed that 84% of WS Fe (extract that passed through 0.45 μm pore filter) was smaller than nominally 4 nm, with 61% of the soluble iron was smaller than nominally 2 nm. A correlation analysis, experiments involving addition of oxalate to sample extract and a pH cycling experiment with selected Fe species were consistent with the oxalate-Fe ligand being mainly found in the smallest ultrafiltrate size (< nominally 2 nm), whereas pH cycling could lead to the formation of colloidal particles with sizes between nominally 2–4 nm. Magnetite, a solid Fe nanoparticle (smaller than 0.1 μm) detected in human organs in previous studies, was undetectable in the PM₂.₅ WS Fe in urban Atlanta. These data show that most WS Fe is composed of soluble species or very small colloidal particles (roughly <4 nm), making them highly bioavailable.
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