The seasonal changes in ambient mass concentrations and chemical composition of fine particulate matter (PM) were investigated in three locations in Poland. The analyses included PM-bound hazardous benzo()pyrene (BaP), As, Ni, Cd, and Pb. The samples of PM were collected daily in Katowice (southern Poland, urban background site), Gdańsk, and Diabla Góra (northern Poland, urban and regional background sites, respectively) during 1-year-long campaign in 2010. Based on monthly ambient concentrations of PM-bound carbon (organic and elemental), water-soluble ions (Na, NH, K, Mg, Ca, Cl, NO, SO), and elements As, Ni, Cd, Pb, Ti, Al, Fe, the chemical mass closure of PM was checked for each of the four seasons of the year and for the heating and non-heating periods at each site. Also, the annual concentrations of PM were determined and the annual PM mass closure checked. At each measuring point, the PM concentrations were high compared to its Polish yearly permissible value, 25 μg/m, and its concentrations elsewhere in Europe. The highest annual PM concentration, 43 μg/m, occurred in Katowice; it was twice the annual PM concentration in Gdańsk, and thrice the one in Diabla Góra. The high annual averages were due to very high monthly concentrations in the heating period, which were highest in the winter. PM consisted mainly of carbonaceous matter (elemental carbon (EC) + organic matter (OM), the sum of elemental carbon, EC, and organic matter, OM; its annual mass contributions to PM were 43, 31, and 33 % in Katowice, Gdansk, and Diabla Góra, respectively), secondary inorganic aerosol (SIA), the Na_Cl group, and crustal matter (CM)-in the decreasing order of their yearly mass contributions to PM. OM, EC, SIA, Na_Cl, and CM accounted for almost 81 % of the PM mass in Katowice, 74 % in Gdańsk, and 90 % in Diabla Góra. The annual average toxic metal contribution to the PM mass was not greater than 0.2 % at each site. In Katowice and Gdańsk, the yearly ambient BaP concentrations were high (15.4 and 3.2 ng/m, respectively); in rural Diabla Góra, the concentrations of BaP were almost equal to 1 ng/m, the Polish BaP annual limit. The great seasonal fluctuations of the shares of the component groups in PM and of the concentrations of PM and its components are due to the seasonal fluctuations of the emissions of PM and its precursors from hard and brown coal combustion for energy production, growing in a heating season, reaching maximum in winter, and decreasing in a non-heating period. In Gdańsk, northern Poland, especially in the spring and autumn, sea spray might have affected the chemical composition of PM. The greatest hazard from PM occurs in Katowice, southern Poland, in winter, when very high concentrations of PM and PM-related carbonaceous matter, including BaP, are maintained by poor natural ventilation in cities, weather conditions, and the highest level of industrialization in Poland. In less industrialized northern Poland, where the aeration in cities is better and rather gaseous than solid fuels are used, the health hazard from ambient PM is much lower.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11869-013-0222-y | DOI Listing |
Air Qual Atmos Health
November 2015
Institute of Oceanography, University of Gdańsk, Al. Marszałka J. Piłsudskiego 46, 81-378 Gdynia, Polska.
Elemental carbon (EC) and organic carbon (OC) concentrations were measured in PM2.5 and PM10 samples collected at Diabla Gora (Puszcza Borecka National Nature Reserve, Poland) between 1 January and 31 December 2009, to investigate the seasonal and daily concentration variations and source regions. Strict sampling and measurement procedure, together with analysis of air mass backward trajectories and pollutant markers, indicated that the most important sources of carbon in the aerosols over Diabla Gora were vegetation, agricultural activity, and biomass burning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAir Qual Atmos Health
December 2013
Institute of Environmental Engineering, Polish Academy of Sciences, 34 M. Skłodowska-Curie St., 41-819 Zabrze, Poland.
The seasonal changes in ambient mass concentrations and chemical composition of fine particulate matter (PM) were investigated in three locations in Poland. The analyses included PM-bound hazardous benzo()pyrene (BaP), As, Ni, Cd, and Pb. The samples of PM were collected daily in Katowice (southern Poland, urban background site), Gdańsk, and Diabla Góra (northern Poland, urban and regional background sites, respectively) during 1-year-long campaign in 2010.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Fluoresc
September 2013
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, IL 62901, USA.
Understanding molecular interactions is critical to understanding most biological mechanisms of cells and organisms. In the case of small molecule-protein interactions, many molecules have significant biological activity through interactions with unknown target proteins and by unknown modes of action. Identifying these target proteins is of significant importance and ongoing work in our laboratories is developing a technique termed Dynamic Isoelectric Anisotropy Binding Ligand Assay (DIABLA) to meet this need.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Proteome Res
October 2008
Department of Chemistry, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, Illinois 62901, USA.
Dynamic isoelectric/anisotropy binding ligand assay (DIABLA) is a new method to identify proteins in a complex sample that bind to a molecule of interest. This is accomplished by first using capillary isoelectric focusing (cIEF) to separate the proteins in a capillary based on their isoelectric point. This separation is performed while the compound being tested is present in the separation buffer.
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