2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2009.04.031
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Environmental aging of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons on soot and its effect on source identification

Abstract: Soot associated PAHs were exposed to simulated sunlight to investigate disappearance rates under environmental aging conditions and to examine the robustness of diagnostic ratios for PAH source apportionment. Naphthalene, acenaphthylene, acenaphthene, and fluorene showed an obvious twophase disappearance in all experiments while phenanthrene and anthracene exhibited this behavior for all but the highest soot loading. The first phase loss is 5-40 times faster than the second phase loss and occurred within 3 h f… Show more

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Cited by 82 publications
(44 citation statements)
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“…The formation of this cluster can be explained by incomplete combustion processes as a common source of all the three parameters, and highlights the strong interaction between the particle phase represented by BC and the organic molecular species contained in UVPM. These molecules, quantitatively determined by THC concentration measurements, are verified to have a high probability to be adsorbed on BC particles surfaces (Kim et al, 2009). From concentration values in Table 3, it can be easily verified that more than 90 % of THC consists of methane, and therefore a good correlation between BC, UVPM and CH 4 can be inferred from CA.…”
Section: Cluster Analysismentioning
confidence: 76%
“…The formation of this cluster can be explained by incomplete combustion processes as a common source of all the three parameters, and highlights the strong interaction between the particle phase represented by BC and the organic molecular species contained in UVPM. These molecules, quantitatively determined by THC concentration measurements, are verified to have a high probability to be adsorbed on BC particles surfaces (Kim et al, 2009). From concentration values in Table 3, it can be easily verified that more than 90 % of THC consists of methane, and therefore a good correlation between BC, UVPM and CH 4 can be inferred from CA.…”
Section: Cluster Analysismentioning
confidence: 76%
“…Sorption also increases with increasing soil organic carbon content (Wang et al, 2001) and decreasing pore size (Semple et al, 2003). In soot, a carbon-rich matrix, pyrolytic PAHs are highly sorbed and occluded, which reduces their degradation in comparison to other surfaces (Kim et al, 2009). At DSS organic carbon content is lower than at coastal marine sediments (Nagata et al, 2010) thus PAHs are more bioavailable.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this work we apply the same approach, but for PAH photodegradation in bulk deposits of soot particles collected onto Teflon filters, using our recently published disappearance profiles of illuminated PAHs on soot (Kim et al, 2009). Applying eq.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%