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Understanding the Influence of Open-waste Burning on Urban Aerosols using Metal Tracers and Lead Isotopic Composition

IR@NPL: CSIR-National Physical Laboratory, New Delhi

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Title Understanding the Influence of Open-waste Burning on Urban Aerosols using Metal Tracers and Lead Isotopic Composition
 
Creator Kumar, Sudhanshu
Aggarwal, Shankar Gopala
Sarangi, Bighnaraj
Malherbe, Julien
Barre, Julien P. G.
Berail, Sylvain
Seby, Fabienne
Donard, Olivier F. X.
 
Subject Earth Sciences
 
Description Open-waste burning (OWB) is one of the primary sources of urban aerosols in several developing countries. To better understand the influence of OWB emissions on urban aerosols, total suspended particles (TSP) and size-segregated samples were collected at an open-waste burning site (the Okhla landfill) and two urban sites in New Delhi. The TSP samples were analysed for selected metals (As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Fe, Ni, Pb, Sb, Se, Sn, Sr, V and Zn) using ICP-MS. In general, among the metals, Fe and Zn were mostly dominant, and As, Cd and Se were found in trace concentrations in the majority of the samples. Additionally, Pb concentrations were similar to 5-8 fold higher in urban wintertime samples than other samples. Tin, a tracer for waste-burning aerosols, ranged between 0.055 and 0.675 mu g m(-3)in OWB aerosols. Interestingly, the concentration of Sn was significantly high in the urban wintertime aerosols, specifically, 0.082-0.284 mu g m(-3). Tin also showed a high enrichment factor in the urban wintertime aerosols, suggesting its anthropogenic origin, possibly because of enhanced OWB practices in winter. Waste burning was also found to be one of the primary sources of chromium, which ranged between 0.102 and 0.606 mu g m(-3) in OWB aerosols and between 0.114 and 0.574 mu g m(-3) in urban aerosols. Since Cr(VI) is of interest due to its impact on health, the soluble Cr(VI) concentration was determined and found to be 6.1210.2 ng m(-3) (similar to 1-6% of the total Cr in OWB aerosols compared to 0.33-0.65 ng m(-3) [< 1% of the total Cr]) in urban aerosols. The lead isotopic signatures of OWB aerosols, viz., the (208)pb/(206)pb and (206)pb/Pb-207 ratios, were determined to be 2.1369 +/- 0.0029 and 1.1316 +/- 0.0035, whereas those of the urban aerosols were 2.1369 +/- 0.0026 and 1.1243 +/- 0.0024, respectively. However, the ranges of these values among the different aerosol types were not very distinct and showed discreet overlaps. This Pb isotopic study, along with metal fingerprints, suggests the increased influence of OWB emissions in winter on New Delhi aerosols.
 
Publisher Taiwan Association for Aerosol Research
 
Date 2018-09
 
Type Article
PeerReviewed
 
Format application/pdf
 
Identifier http://npl.csircentral.net/3721/1/Understanding%20the%20Influence%20of.pdf
Kumar, Sudhanshu and Aggarwal, Shankar Gopala and Sarangi, Bighnaraj and Malherbe, Julien and Barre, Julien P. G. and Berail, Sylvain and Seby, Fabienne and Donard, Olivier F. X. (2018) Understanding the Influence of Open-waste Burning on Urban Aerosols using Metal Tracers and Lead Isotopic Composition. Aerosol and air quality research, 18 (9). pp. 2433-2446. ISSN 1680-8584
 
Relation http://npl.csircentral.net/3721/