Six-year source apportionment of submicron organic aerosols from near-continuous highly time-resolved measurements at SIRTA (Paris area, France)
Yunjiang Zhang Olivier Favez Jean-Eudes Petit Francesco Canonaco Francois Truong Nicolas Bonnaire Vincent Crenn Tanguy Amodeo Andre S. H. Prévôt Jean Sciare Valerie Gros Alexandre Albinet
Abstract. Organic aerosol (OA) particles are recognized as key factors influencing air
quality and climate change. However, highly time-resolved long-term
characterizations of their composition and sources in ambient air are still
very limited due to challenging continuous observations. Here, we present an
analysis of long-term variability of submicron OA using the combination of
an aerosol chemical speciation monitor (ACSM) and a multiwavelength Aethalometer
from November 2011 to March 2018 at a peri-urban background site of the
Paris region (France). Source apportionment of OA was achieved via partially
constrained positive matrix factorization (PMF) using the multilinear engine
(ME-2). Two primary OA (POA) and two oxygenated OA (OOA) factors were
identified and quantified over the entire studied period. POA factors were
designated as hydrocarbon-like OA (HOA) and biomass burning OA (BBOA). The
latter factor presented a significant seasonality with higher concentrations
in winter with significant monthly contributions to OA (18 %–33 %) due to
enhanced residential wood burning emissions. HOA mainly originated from
traffic emissions but was also influenced by biomass burning in cold
periods. OOA factors were distinguished between their less- and
more-oxidized fractions (LO-OOA and MO-OOA, respectively). These factors
presented distinct seasonal patterns, associated with different atmospheric
formation pathways. A pronounced increase in LO-OOA concentrations and
contributions (50 %–66 %) was observed in summer, which may be mainly
explained by secondary OA (SOA) formation processes involving biogenic
gaseous precursors. Conversely, high concentrations and OA contributions
(32 %–62 %) of MO-OOA during winter and spring seasons were partly
associated with anthropogenic emissions and/or long-range transport from
northeastern Europe. The contribution of the different OA factors as a
function of OA mass loading highlighted the dominant roles of POA during
pollution episodes in fall and winter and of SOA for highest springtime and
summertime OA concentrations. Finally, long-term trend analyses indicated a
decreasing feature (of about −175 ng m−3 yr−1) for MO-OOA, very
limited or insignificant decreasing trends for primary anthropogenic
carbonaceous aerosols (BBOA and HOA, along with the fossil-fuel and biomass-burning black carbon components) and no statistically significant trend for
LO-OOA over the 6-year investigated period.