High contributions of vehicular emissions to ammonia in three European cities derived from mobile measurements
2018
Elser, Miriam | El-Haddad, Imad | Maasikmets, Marek | Bozzetti, Carlo | Wolf, Robert | Ciarelli, Giancarlo | Slowik, Jay G. | Richter, Rene | Teinemaa, Erik | Hüglin, Christoph | Baltensperger, Urs | Prévôt, André S.H.
Ambient ammonia (NH₃) measurements were performed with a mobile platform in three European cities: Zurich (Switzerland), Tartu (Estonia) and Tallinn (Estonia) deploying an NH₃ analyzer based on cavity ring-down spectroscopy. A heated inlet line along with an auxiliary flow was used to minimize NH₃ adsorption onto the inlet walls. In addition, a detailed characterization of the response and recovery times of the measurement system was used to deconvolve the true NH₃ signal from the remaining adsorption-induced hysteresis. Parallel measurements with an aerosol mass spectrometer were used to correct the observed NH₃ for the contribution of ammonium nitrate, which completely evaporated in the heated line at the chosen temperature, in contrast to ammonium sulfate. In this way a quantitative measurement of ambient gaseous NH₃ was achieved with sufficient time resolution to enable measurement of NH₃ point sources with a mobile sampling platform. The NH₃ analyzer and the aerosol mass spectrometer were complemented by an aethalometer and various gas-phase analyzers to enable a complete characterization of the sources of air pollution, including the spatial distributions and the regional background concentrations and urban increments of all measured components. Although at all three locations similar increment levels of organic aerosols were attributed to biomass burning and traffic, traffic emissions clearly dominated the city enhancements of NH₃, equivalent black carbon (eBC) and carbon dioxide (CO₂). Urban increments of 3.4, 1.8 and 3.0 ppb of NH₃ were measured in the traffic areas in Zurich, Tartu and Tallinn, respectively, representing an enhancement of 36.6, 38.3 and 93.8% over the average background concentrations. Measurements in areas strongly influenced by traffic emissions (including tunnel drives) were used to estimate emission factors (EF) for the traffic-related pollutants. The obtained median EFs range between 136.8-415.1 mg kg⁻¹ fuel for NH₃, 157.1–734.8 mg kg⁻¹ fuel for eBC and 39.9–324.3 mg kg⁻¹ fuel for HOA. Significant differences were found between the EFs of certain components in the three cities, which were partially linked to an older vehicle fleet in Estonia compared to Switzerland. Using the determined EFs we show that traffic can fully explain the NH₃ enhancements in the three cities and also presents a non-negligible fraction of the background concentrations, which are mostly related to agricultural activities. Moreover, the estimated total contribution of traffic to NH₃ at all three locations is in good agreement with the available emission inventories.
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