Speciation of Fe in ambient aerosol and cloudwater

NOTE: Text or symbols not renderable in plain ASCII are indicated by [...]. Abstract is included in .pdf document. Atmospheric iron (Fe) is thought to play an important role in cloudwater chemistry (e.g., S(IV) oxidation, oxidant production, etc.), and is also an important source of Fe to certain r...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Siefert, Ronald Lyn
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 1997
Online Access:https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/216/1/Siefert_rl_1997.pdf
Siefert, Ronald Lyn (1997) Speciation of Fe in ambient aerosol and cloudwater. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/fssg-ew75. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01172008-110632 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01172008-110632>
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Summary:NOTE: Text or symbols not renderable in plain ASCII are indicated by [...]. Abstract is included in .pdf document. Atmospheric iron (Fe) is thought to play an important role in cloudwater chemistry (e.g., S(IV) oxidation, oxidant production, etc.), and is also an important source of Fe to certain regions of the worlds oceans where Fe is believed to be a rate-limiting nutrient for primary productivity. This thesis focuses on understanding the chemistry, speciation and abundance of Fe in cloudwater and aerosol in the troposphere, through observations of Fe speciation in the cloudwater and aerosol samples collected over the continental United States and the Arabian Sea. Different chemical species of atmospheric Fe were measured in aerosol and cloudwater samples to help assess the role of Fe in cloudwater chemistry. Chapter 2 presents a set of experiments which used ambient aerosol samples suspended in aqueous solution and then irradiated with uv-light to simulate cloudwater conditions. These experiments found Fe to be a critical component for the production of [...]. Chapter 3 discusses the development and application of a novel photochemical extraction method for the determination of photochemically-available Fe in ambient aerosol samples. Photochemically-available Fe ranged from < 4 ng [...] to 308 ng [...], and accounted for 2.8% to 100% of the total Fe in aerosol samples collected in California and New York. Calculations based on the results of these experiments predicted that redox reactions of Fe in cloudwater could be an important in situ source of oxidants ([...], [...]/[...]). Chapter 4 presents results of several field studies which measured the redox states of Fe and other transition metals (Mn, Cu and Cr) in cloudwater. These measurements were then used in thennodynamic models which predicted Fe(III) to be either as Fe(III)-hydroxy species or Fe(III)-oxalate species. However, an un-identified strong chelating ligand with Fe(III) was also suggested by the thermodynamic model results. Chapter 5 presents results of a field study conducted on the Arabian Sea. Total atmospheric labile-Fe(II) ranged between < 0.09 ng [...] to 7.5 ng [...] during the inter-monsoon period, and was consistently below the detection limit during the southwest-monsoon period. The labile-Fe(II) measured during the inter-monsoon period was predominantly found in the fine fraction of the aerosol. Principal component analysis revealed a significant source of Fe and Mn which was not associated with the main aeolian dust component.