TY - JOUR AU - Jourdain, B. AU - Legrand, M. PY - 2002// TI - Year-round records of bulk and size-segregated aerosol composition and HCl and HNO3 levels in the Dumont d'Urville (coastal Antarctica) atmosphere: Implications for sea-salt aerosol fractionation in the winter and summer T2 - J. Geophys. Res. JO - Journal of geophysical research-atmospheres VL - 107 PB - American Geophysical Union KW - 0330 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Geochemical cycles KW - 0365 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Troposphere—composition and chemistry KW - 0368 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Troposphere—constituent transport and chemistry N2 - Year-round composition of bulk and size-segregated aerosol was examined at a coastal Antarctic site (Dumont d'Urville). Sea-salt particles display a summer depletion of chloride relative to sodium, which reaches ?10%. The mass chloride loss is maximum on 1- to 3-?m-diameter particles, nitrate being often the anion causing the chloride loss. The summer SO42?/Na+ ratio exceeds the seawater value on submicron particles due to biogenic sulfate and on coarse particles due to ornithogenic (guano-enriched soils) sulfate and to heterogeneous uptake of SO2 (or H2SO4). HCl levels range from 47 ± 28 ng m?3 in the winter to 130 ± 110 ng m?3 in the summer, being close to the mass chloride loss of sea-salt aerosols. In the winter, sea-salt particles exhibit Cl?/Na+ and SO42?/Na+ mass ratios of 1.9 ± 0.1 and 0.13 ± 0.04, respectively. Resulting from precipitation of mirabilite during freezing of seawater, this sulfate-depletion-relative sodium takes place from May to October. From March to April, warmer temperatures and/or smaller sea ice extent offshore the site limit the phenomenon. A range of 14–50 ng m?3 of submicron sulfate is found, confirming the existence of nssSO42? in the winter at a coastal Antarctic site, highest values being found in the winters of 1992–1994 due to the Pinatubo volcanic input. Apart from these three winters, nssSO42? levels range between 15 and 30 ng m?3, but its origin is still unclear (quasi-continuous SO2 emissions from the Mount Erebus volcano or local wintertime dimethyl sulfide [DMS] oxidation, in addition to long-range transported by-product of DMS oxidation). SN - 0148-0227 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2002JD002471 N1 - exported from refbase (http://publi.ipev.fr/polar_references/show.php?record=5646), last updated on Tue, 28 Apr 2009 13:13:39 +0200 ID - Jourdain+Legrand2002 ER -