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Source apportionment of particulate matter in Europe: A review of methods and results

  • Maria del Mar Viana
  • , T. A. J. Kuhlbusch
  • , Xavier Querol
  • , Andres Alastuey
  • , Roy M. Harrison
  • , Phil K. Hopke
  • , W. Winiwarter
  • , Marko Vallius
  • , Sönke Szidat
  • , André S. H. Prevot
  • , Christoph Hueglin
  • , Henk Bloemen
  • , Per Wahlin
  • , Roberta Vecchi
  • , Ana Isabel Miranda
  • , Anne Kasper-Giebl
  • , Willy Maenhaut
  • , Regina Hitzenberger

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

European publications dealing with source apportionment (SA) of atmospheric particulate matter (PM) between 1987 and 2007 were reviewed in the present work, with a focus on methods and results. The main goal of this meta-analysis was to provide a review of the most commonly used SA methods in Europe, their comparability and results, and to evaluate current trends and identify possible gaps of the methods and future research directions. Our analysis showed that studies throughout Europe agree on the identification of four main source types (PM10PM10 and PM2.5PM2.5): a vehicular source (traced by carbon/Fe/Ba/Zn/Cu), a crustal source (Al/Si/Ca/Fe), a sea-salt source (Na/Cl/Mg), and a mixed industrial/fuel-oil combustion (View the MathML sourceV/Ni/SO42-) and a secondary aerosol View the MathML source(SO42-/NO3-/NH4+) source (the latter two probably representing the same source type). Their contributions to bulk PM levels varied widely at different monitoring sites, and showed clear spatial patterns in the cases of the crustal and sea-salt sources. Other specific sources such as biomass combustion or shipping emissions were rarely identified, even though they may contribute significantly to PM levels in specific locations.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)827-849
Number of pages23
JournalJournal of Aerosol Science
Issue number39
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2008

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 1030 Physics, Astronomy
  • 105904 Environmental research

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