2012
DOI: 10.1080/02786826.2011.645956
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Chemical and Isotopic Composition of Humic-Like Substances (HULIS) in Ambient Aerosols in Guangzhou, South China

Abstract: Humic-like substances (HULIS) constitute a class of organic compounds identified in atmospheric samples that influence many properties of aerosols in the atmosphere. In this study, 6 HULIS samples were isolated from atmospheric total suspended particle (TSP) samples collected at 3 locations in Guangzhou of China, 1 each in summer and winter. On the basis of analyses by elemental analyzer, more detailed chemical species of elements were explored by proton nuclear magnetic resonance ( China (No. 40975090, 40830… Show more

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Cited by 74 publications
(71 citation statements)
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“…3, regardless of the studied environment, all aerosol WSOC samples exhibit the same major proton types; however, they differ in terms of the relative distribution of the major proton regions. Overall, the relative content of the proton functional groups obtained in this study are within the range of those published for WSOC hydrophobic acid fractions or "humic-like substances (HULIS)" from atmospheric aerosols (e.g., Graham et al, 2002;Decesari et al, 2005;Song et al, 2012;Chalbot et al, 2014Chalbot et al, , 2016Lopes et al, 2015). For the South American sites, the saturated aliphatic protons are the most important component (36e59%), followed by unsaturated (20e33%) and oxygenated (13e40%) aliphatic protons, and a less contribution from aromatic protons (2.0e10%).…”
Section: Contribution Of Wsoc To Pm Masssupporting
confidence: 61%
“…3, regardless of the studied environment, all aerosol WSOC samples exhibit the same major proton types; however, they differ in terms of the relative distribution of the major proton regions. Overall, the relative content of the proton functional groups obtained in this study are within the range of those published for WSOC hydrophobic acid fractions or "humic-like substances (HULIS)" from atmospheric aerosols (e.g., Graham et al, 2002;Decesari et al, 2005;Song et al, 2012;Chalbot et al, 2014Chalbot et al, , 2016Lopes et al, 2015). For the South American sites, the saturated aliphatic protons are the most important component (36e59%), followed by unsaturated (20e33%) and oxygenated (13e40%) aliphatic protons, and a less contribution from aromatic protons (2.0e10%).…”
Section: Contribution Of Wsoc To Pm Masssupporting
confidence: 61%
“…Each sample was collected for approximately 24 h, and a total of five filters was obtained. Detailed information regarding the sampling sites is provided in our previous studies (Fan et al, 2012;Song and Peng, 2009). These PM 2.5 samples were collected on Whatman quartz fiber filters (20.3 × 25.4 cm) using a high-volume air sampler at flow rates of 1.05 m 3 min −1 (Tianhong Intelligent Instrument Plant, Wuhan, China).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They constitute a significant portion of the organic matter (OM) in atmospheric aerosols (up to about 30 %) collected in urban and rural environments and in aerosols produced by BB (Mayol-Bracero et al, 2002;Krivacsy et al, 2008;Lin et al, 2010a, b). Their carbon (C) mass accounts for 9-72 % of the C content of water-soluble organic matter (WSOM) in atmospheric aerosols (Feczko et al, 2007;Krivacsy et al, 2008;Lin et al, 2010b;Fan et al, 2012;Song et al, 2012). These atmospheric HULIS materials are found ubiquitously in various environments, and are derived from various sources.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The alcohol and ketone groups were slightly more abundant in the larger particles. The O/C ratios for the fine particles (<2 μm) were calculated using the peaks areas of the oxygen-containing carbon chemical states to the total C1s peak (excluding the contribution from the inorganic carbon) and are shown in Table 2 (Song and Peng 2009;Song et al 2012). The results reveal that the O/C ratio increased as the particle size increased from 0.1 to 0.56 μm, suggesting that the accumulation-mode particles were more oxidized than the smaller fresher particles.…”
Section: Carbon Chemical Statesmentioning
confidence: 99%