Variations of the aerosol chemical composition during Asian dust storm at Dushanbe, Tajikistan

Abstract

Aerosol chemical composition was characterized during the Central Asian Dust Experiment (CADEX) at Dushanbe (Tajikistan). Aerosol samples were collected during a period of 2 months from March to May 2015 using a high volume DIGITEL DHA-80 sampler on quartz fiber filters. The filters were analyzed for their ionic, trace metals as well as organic and elemental carbon (OC/EC) content. The aerosol mass showed strong variation with mass concentration ranging from 18 μg/m3 to 110 μg/m3. The mineral dust concentrations varied between 0.9 μg/m3 and 88 μg/m3. Days of high aerosol mass loadings were dominated by mineral dust, which made up to about 80% of the aerosol mass while organic matter and inorganic ions made up about 70% of the aerosol mass during days of low aerosol mass loadings. The mineral dust composition showed different trace metal signatures in comparison to Saharan dust with higher Ca content and Ca/Fe ratios twice as high as that observed in Saharan dust. Strong influence of anthropogenic activities was observed in the trace metal concentrations with Zn and Pb concentrations ranging from 7 to 197 ng/m3 and 2 to 20 ng/m3, respectively. Mineral dust and anthropogenic activities relating to traffic, combustion as well as metallurgical industrial emissions are identified as the sources of the aerosol during this period. © 2019 The Authors, published by EDP Sciences.

Description
Keywords
Aerosols, Industrial emissions, Metals, Minerals, Organic carbon, Storms, Trace analysis, Trace elements, Aerosol chemical composition, Aerosol mass loading, Anthropogenic activity, Asian dust storm, Mass concentration, Organic and elemental carbon, Quartz fiber filters, Trace metal concentration, Dust
Citation
Fomba, K. W., Müller, K., Hofer, J., Makhmudov, A. N., Althausen, D., Nazarov, B. I., et al. (2019). Variations of the aerosol chemical composition during Asian dust storm at Dushanbe, Tajikistan. 99. Les Ulis : EDP Sciences. https://doi.org//10.1051/e3sconf/20199903007
License
CC BY 4.0 Unported