Identification of most preferable reaction pathways for chloride depletion from size segregated sea-salt aerosols: A study over high altitude Himalaya, tropical urban metropolis and tropical coastal mangrove forest in eastern India.

Chemosphere

Environmental Sciences Section, Bose Institute, P1/12 CIT Scheme VII-M, Kolkata, 700054, India; National Facility on Astroparticle Physics and Space Science, Bose Institute, 16 A J C Bose Road, Darjeeling, 734101, India. Electronic address:

Published: April 2020

Depletion of chloride from sea-salt aerosols affects their hygroscopicity, cloud condensation nuclei activity as well as microphysical and chemical properties of aerosols and clouds modifying earth-atmosphere radiative balance. Here, we proposed five possible reaction pathways through which the inorganic acids (HSO and HNO) could deplete chloride from sea-salt aerosols. We determined "maximum potential contribution" (MPC) of each acid and compared the MPC with actual chloride depletion. This step-by-step approach enables us to identify the most preferable reaction pathway(s) for coarse, superfine, accumulation and ultrafine aerosols over a Himalayan station (Darjeeling), a tropical urban station (Kolkata) and a tropical mangrove forest at the north-east coast of Bay of Bengal (Sundarban) in India. Over Kolkata and Darjeeling, locally generated acids reacted with transported sea-salts. Over Sundarban, the locally generated sea-salts from the Bay of Bengal reacted with the acids of biomass burning plume transported from Eastern Ghat and continental haze transported from upper Indo-Gangetic Plain. The average chloride depletion in PM10 ranged between 70 and 74% over Sundarban and 31-34% over Kolkata and Darjeeling. We observed that HNO(g) depleted the larger (>1 μm) chlorides whereas HSO(g) depleted the smaller (<1 μm) chlorides over Kolkata and Darjeeling. However, in addition to HSO(g) and HNO(g), some other species could be involved in chloride depletion over Sundarban mainly during winter. The study reveals that Sundarban acts as the major sink of the inorganic acids transported from Eastern Ghat biomass burning plume inhibiting their further advection towards inland regions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2019.125673DOI Listing

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