| |
Monitoring
Projects Underway at the Midwest RPO |
| |
|  |
Organic
Carbon Speciation at Seney |
| This lovely vista was
photographed from the top of the fire tower at Seney National Wildlife
Refuge in the upper peninsula of Michigan. Seney is one of
two Class 1 areas in the Midwest RPO states where visibility is
a protected resource (Isle Royale National Park is the other).
Because most visibility impairment is caused by fine particle pollution,
we began a study in 2002 to collect particulate samples and analyze
the organic fraction for a suite of chemical species that can be
used as markers for various sources of organic carbon (gasoline-
and diesel-fueled vehicles, wood burning, meat cooking, and other
combustion processes). Dr. Jamie Schauer and his graduate
student Rebecca Sheesley of the University of Wisconsin-Madison
are conducting the analysis, which will include data from monthly
composite samples for the entire year and a subset of daily samples
taken with a special high-volume sampler. The resulting source
apportionment will produce valuable information on the relative
importance of anthropogenic and biogenic sources to visibility impairment
in this scenic wilderness.
Other measurements at Seney include ozone, speciated PM2.5 (through
the IMPROVE network), light scattering (nephelometer), continuous
PM2.5 (TEOM), meteorology, acid deposition (through the NADP network),
and visibility (a camera records the scene from the fire tower every
15 minutes as part of the Midwest
Haze Camera network)
|
 |
|
In the plot at the left, the green
portion of each bar represents the fraction of fine particles that
is made up of organic carbon. Over the entire year,
OC makes up 25% of measured PM at Seney. It peaks in the summer,
which might be due to biogenic activity (terpene emissions from
pine trees increase with sunlight and higher temperatures) or to
increased emissions from anthropogenic sources and resulting photochemical
reactions, or to a combination of both. Ammonium sulfate and
ammonium nitrate are also significant fractions of PM mass at Seney
(47% and 19%, respectively). High sulfate mass has been
associated with air masses that come from the southern shore of
Lake Erie, northern Ohio, and southern Lower Peninsula of Michigan.
High nitrate mass is associated with air flows from the southwest,
including the Chicago/Milwaukee urban area and eastern Iowa.
High organic carbon days look similar to high sulfate days, with
apparent influences from Chicago and Gary (see plot below).

|
 |
Results of the speciated carbon analysis at Seney show that markers from primary
emission sources are more prevalent during the winter months.
For example, the figure at left shows that hopanes, steranes and
PAHs, which are associated with combustion of fossil fuels, are
found primarily during cold weather. Levoglucosan, a marker
for biomass burning, is also found primarily in the winter with
a smaller secondary peak in the summer. In contrast, markers
of secondary formation (e.g., the aromatic and aliphatic di- and
tri-acids) peak in the summer, supporting the hypothesis that summer
OC in this remote area is dominated by secondary formation.
Complete details on the Seney analysis are available in the draft
report, Source Apportionment of Atmospheric Fine Particulate
Matter Collected at the Seney National Wildlife Refuge, by
Rebecca Sheesley and Jamie Schauer--contact Donna
Kenski for a copy. |
 |
Urban Organic Speciation |
| Jamie Schauer and Rebecca Sheesley are
continuing their research into organic carbon at four additional sites:
Indianapolis, Detroit, Cincinnati, and Bondville, Illinois.
Monitoring began at these sites in October 2003 and will continue
through the end of 2004. Sampling is on a 1/6 day schedule and
is supplemented by DRUM sampling, on the same schedule, at Bondville
and Indianapolis. Each of the urban sites is also collecting
speciated PM2.5 as part of EPA's STN network; Bondville has an IMPROVE
sampler. Additionally, the sites are running a variety of continuous
PM and gas samplers, as well as meteorology. Sonoma Technology
is under contract to validate and analyze the resulting data set.
For more details, see the project
workplan. |
|
|