Publications by authors named "U Dusek"

Methylsiloxanes have gained growing attention as emerging pollutants due to their toxicity to organisms. As man-made chemicals with no natural source, most research to date has focused on volatile methylsiloxanes from personal care or household products and industrial processes. Here, we show that methylsiloxanes can be found in primary aerosol particles emitted by vehicles based on aerosol samples collected in two tunnels in São Paulo, Brazil.

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The chemical and stable carbon isotopic composition of the organic aerosol particles (OA) emitted by a shuttle passenger ship between mainland Naples and island Capri in Italy were investigated. Various methylsiloxanes and derivatives were found in particulate ship emissions for the first time, as identified in the mass spectra of a thermal desorption - proton transfer reaction - mass spectrometer (TD-PTR-MS) based on the natural abundance of silicon isotopes. Large contributions of methylsiloxanes to OA (up to 59.

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Article Synopsis
  • Fossil fuel combustion significantly contributes to atmospheric soot, impacting climate change and human health, but historical estimates are uncertain due to factors like fuel use and emissions.
  • A novel radiocarbon method applied to sedimentary soot in southeastern China over the last 110 years reveals a correlation between economic development and soot emissions, with a noticeable spike starting in 1950.
  • Recent reductions in fossil fuel soot emissions, linked to pollution controls, suggest that soot levels can be managed more effectively than carbon monoxide emissions, highlighting the effects of economic growth and pollution regulations on air quality.
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Carbon isotope signatures are used to gain insight into sources and atmospheric processing of carbonaceous aerosols. Since elemental carbon (EC) is chemically stable, it is possible to apportion the main sources of EC (C3/C4 plant burning, coal combustion, and traffic emissions) using a dual C-C isotope approach. The dual-isotope source apportionment crucially relies on accurate knowledge of C source signatures, which are seldom measured for EC.

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Article Synopsis
  • A chemical analysis of PM (particulate matter) collected from hydrofoil exhaust stacks near Naples aimed to evaluate the impact of ship emissions on air quality.
  • Findings revealed that PM from shunting operations contained higher concentrations of harmful elements and PAHs compared to those from offshore navigation, highlighting local pollution concerns.
  • The study underscores the significant role of shipping in emitting certain pollutants, while also indicating that urban vehicular traffic contributes more to the overall urban PM composition.
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