PIXE-PIGE Analysis Of Aerosol Composition In Urban Italian Environments S. Nava*, A. D’Alessandro*, F. Lucarelli¶, P.A. Mandò¶, G. Marcazzan†, P. Prati*, G. Valli†, R. Vecchi†, and A. Zucchiatti* * Dipartimento di Fisica and INFN, Via Dodecaneso 33, 16146 Genova, Italy Dipartimento di Fisica and INFN, Via Sansone 1, 50019 Sesto Fiorentino, Firenze, Italy † Istituto di Fisica Generale Applicata, Via Celoria 16, 20133 Milano, Italy ¶ Abstract. Fine particulate has become one of the biggest concerns in Italian cities pollution; the study of its composition is a powerful tool to evaluate the effects on health and identify pollution sources. PIXE is an established technique for particulate analysis (being multi-elemental, sensitive, fast, non-destructive and requiring no sample preparations) and has been extensively used, in combination with other IBA techniques, for particulate characterization in Italian urban environments. Here we report the preliminary results on the analysis of the aerosol collected, by twostage continuous streaker samplers, in two Italian cities, Florence and Milan, during July 2001. Elemental concentrations have been extracted in the fine and coarse fractions, with hourly resolution, by PIXE-PIGE analysis, performed at the 3 MeV external proton beam INFN facility at the University of Florence. speed and reasonable costs) of IBA techniques (PIXE, PIGE), make our approach quite unique. In particular, the hourly resolution puts on evidence fast phenomena and time correlations not visible with the standard 24hour sampling. INTRODUCTION An extensive investigation is in progress aiming at the study of the air particulate composition in four major Italian towns (Florence, Genoa, Milan, Naples). The aim of our study is to characterize the particulate matter in the four towns by the same methodological approach and in the same periods. The aerosol has been collected simultaneously in the four towns during winter (January-February) and summer (July-August) 2001, by two-stage continuous streaker samplers [1], which provide the separation of the inhalable particulate matter in two fractions. The sampling sites had been selected in order to be representative of medium-heavy traffic urban zones; they all are close to traffic roads, known to have similar annually average concentration of CO (2.5–3 mg/m3). The concentrations in air of about 20 elements have been measured with hourly resolution by PIXE and PIGE analyses at the 3 MeV external proton beam of the INFN accelerator facility at the University of Florence. The characteristics of our campaign (contemporary continuous sampling in different towns, measurement of hourly elemental concentrations), which was possible thanks to the high sensitivity (and therefore The results concerning the aerosol collected in the winter period are reported elsewhere [2]; here we present the preliminary results concerning the aerosol collected during July 2001 in Florence and Milan. SAMPLING AND ANALYSIS Sampling We used two-stage streaker samplers provided by PIXE International Corporation. Briefly, they consist of a pre-impactor that stops particles with aerodynamic diameter (Dae) >10 µm, a thin Kapton® film that collects by impaction particles with 2.5 µm<Dae<10 µm (coarse stage), and of a Nuclepore® filter that stops all smaller particles (fine stage) [1]. The CP680, Application of Accelerators in Research and Industry: 17th Int'l. Conference, edited by J. L. Duggan and I. L. Morgan © 2003 American Institute of Physics 0-7354-0149-7/03/$20.00 448 Na, Mg and Al) may be underestimate due to the onset of self-absorption effects within the particle grains, mainly in the coarse fraction. Corrective factors are not easy to calculate theoretically because aerosol samples contain particles whose elemental composition and size distribution are a priori not known and not uniform. In order to evaluate experimentally these underestimations, in the last years we often used PIGE simultaneously with PIXE to measure the concentration of Sodium. Kapton® impaction plate and the Nuclepore® filter are paired on a cartridge, which slowly rotates continuously, at an angular speed of about 45°/day. At the end of a week of sampling, therefore, a circular continuous deposit (‘streak’) is produced on each of the two stages and can be analyzed ‘point by point’ in order to reconstruct the hourly trends. Samplers, one for each town, have been installed on the roof of monitoring cabins of the municipal air quality network (Florence – Gramsci, Milan – Zavattari), at about 3 m above ground. The sampling lasted 18 days in Florence (2-20 of July) and 10 days in Milan (2-12 of July). PIGE, based on the detection of gamma rays from (p,γ), (p, p’γ) and (p, αγ) reactions, doesn’t present the problem of self-absorption. Nevertheless, due to the stronger energy dependence of PIGE cross-sections, more attention to the beam energy loss in the target has to be paid. For thin samples the yield is integrated over an energy interval which is in general unknown; to override this problem it is necessary to work at a beam energy such that the cross-sections remain sufficiently constant though the proton energy loss in the sample, being at the same time high enough to provide good sensitivity [5, 6]. In case of aerosol samples the average thickness may be even much smaller than the single grain size (in the coarse stage the thickness of the bigger grains can reach 1 mg/cm2, corresponding to an energy loss for 3 MeV protons of about 80 keV). We calculated the PIGE yield of the reaction 23Na (p, p’γ) 23Na (Eγ = 441 keV) using a reference NaCl thin (46 µm/cm2) standard supplied by Micromatter Inc. As can be seen in Figure 1, the yield shows a good ‘plateaux’ from 2930 to 3000 keV (fluctuations from the mean value less than 10%); although it is a minimum zone, the values are high enough to ensure good sensitivity (MDL = 150 ng/m3). PIXE-PIGE Analysis PIXE (Particle Induced X-ray Emission) - PIGE (Particle Induced γ-ray Emission) analysis was performed with 3 MeV protons at the Van de Graaff accelerator of INFN, in the Physics Department of the University of Florence [3]. The beam was extracted in air by an Upilex window of nominally 6,4 µm thickness. Two Si(Li) detectors, optimized respectively for low and medium-high X ray energies, collected the X-rays, while a HPGe detector collected the γ rays. A Helium gas flow into the volume in front of the smallest detector reduced the Ar peak in the PIXE spectra and minimized the attenuation of the lower X rays. The beam (12 nA maximum, 10 nA average) moved along the streak in steps corresponding to 1 hour of aerosol sampling (each step taking 5 minutes of beam time) and was collected on a graphite Faraday cup behind the target. PIXE spectra were fitted using the GUPIX software package [4] and elemental concentrations obtained via a calibration curve from a set of thin standards of known areal density. Minimum Detection Limits (MDLs), at 3σ level, ranged between 0.9 and 49 ng/m3 for the coarse stage and between 1.9-122 ng/m3 for the fine one (being different the deposition area on Kapton foils and Nuclepore filters). The following elements were detected: Na, Mg, Al, Si, P, S, Cl, K, Ca, Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Ni, Cu, Zn, Se, Br, Sr, Zr and Pb. The uncertainty on the detected concentrations was usually around 5% mainly coming from the calibration uncertainties. The errors are obviously higher when concentrations approach MDLs. Since the concentrations are obtained by a direct comparison with thin standards, the accuracy of the quantitative analysis depends on the thickness of the samples. Both coarse and fine aerosol samples can be considered thin for the matrix effects related to the beam energy loss (because of the slowly varying PIXE cross sections), but the concentrations of the lightest elements (like 100 Na - 441 keV 75 50 25 0 2650 2750 2850 2950 3050 3150 3250 Proton Beam Energy (keV) FIGURE 1. Experimental yield for the reaction 23Na (p, p’γ) 23 Na, measured in 10-20 keV steps; the values are in counts per µC of integrated charge and per µg/cm2 of nominal areal density of Na. For each point the integrated charge ranged from 1 to 20 µC, keeping the statistic error under 10 %. The energy scale refers to the beam nominal energy (in-vacuo energy ± 30 keV). 449 Between the detected elements, fine Sulphur gets the highest values. This element is present in the fine particulate mainly as sulphate [7]; sulphate particles can be emitted directly from fossil fuel combustion processes, but mainly they are produced by oxidation (in the atmosphere) of SO2, also emitted from fossil fuel combustion processes. The persistency time in atmosphere of these fine particles is quite long, and Sulphur concentration time pattern is characterized by a very high, slowly varying background (typical of secondary aerosols), which is highly influenced by meteorological conditions (Figure 4). RESULTS In Figure 2 we report the preliminary results of the Sodium measurements, relative to the Florence coarse fraction aerosol: as can be seen, the correlation between the PIXE and PIGE measured values is high (R2 = 0.97) and the X-ray attenuation resulted about 40 %. 3 PIGE Sodium (µg/m ) 4 3 6 S W 2 4 y = 1.65 x - 0.03 R2 = 0.97 1 0 0 1 2 2 3 3 PIXE Sodium (µg/m ) FIGURE 2. Linear regression between the Sodium concentrations obtained by PIXE and PIGE measurements, relative to Florence coarse fraction aerosol. 0 7/2/01 7/3/01 7/4/01 7/5/01 7/6/01 7/7/01 7/8/01 7/9/01 7/10/01 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 From the PIXE spectra, concentration time series have been obtained, both in the fine and coarse stage covering 12 days in Florence (2-14 July) and a week (2-10 July) in Milan. The bar diagram of Figure 3 shows the average elemental concentrations of the elements which exceeded their MDLs more than the 10% of the cases. FIGURE 4. Fine stage Milan Sulphur concentration (µg/m3, continuous) and wind speed (m/s, dashed), measured in the same site. Pb and Br are highly correlated (Florence R = 0.82, Milan R = 0.81); these elements are mainly produced in urban Italian environments by leaded fuel combustion. Because of the increasing use of unleaded fuels, the concentration of these elements drastically dropped since the beginning of the 90’s, but the high sensitivity of PIXE analysis makes it possible to still detect them in short measurement times. Figure 5 shows the Pb and Br concentration trends in Florence: the patterns exhibit correlated daily variations, with peaks in the morning traffic rush hours (around 8:30 a.m.). Only on Sunday (8th of July) morning the traffic peak is absent (otherwise it can be noted a peak during the Saturday-Sunday night). In Florence the Br/Pb ratio is 0.24, similar to those reported in literature for the traffic source profile in urban areas [8] and to the values found in our previous works [2, 3, 9, 10]; in Milan a bit lower value (about 0.21) could confirm the presence of different sources of Pb [11]. 10000 Florence fine stage Milan fine stage Florence coarse stage Milan coarse stage 1000 100 10 1 Na M g Al Si S Cl K Ca Ti Cr M n Fe Ni Cu Zn Br Sr Pb FIGURE 3. Mean concentrations (ng/m3) obtained by PIXE measurements. The values are calculated considering only the cases when element is above its MDL. 450 3 0.16 0.05 Pb Br 0.04 0.12 0.03 0.08 0.02 0.04 0.01 0.00 7/2/01 7/3/01 0.00 0.00 7/4/01 7/5/01 7/6/01 7/7/01 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 Br concentration (µg/m3) Pb concentration ( µg/m ) 0.20 0.00 7/8/01 7/9/01 7/10/01 7/11/01 7/12/01 7/13/01 7/14/01 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 FIGURE 5. Fine stage Lead and Bromine concentrations in Florence; the grid lines correspond to the midnights. 3. Del Carmine, P., Lucarelli, F., Mandò, P. A., Moscheni, G., Pecchioli, A., and MacArthur, J. D., Nucl. Inst. and Meth. B45, 341 (1990). CONCLUSIONS 4. Maxwell, J. A., Teesdale, W. J., and Campbell, J. L., Nucl. Inst. and Meth. B95, 407 (1995). The first results obtained by the analysis of time series give indication of urban pollution processes that are quite understood from previous works. The analysis of the data relative to Genoa and Naples, as well as a statistical study, including standard and Absolute Principal Component Factor Analysis, is in progress. 5. Calastrini, F., Del Carmine, P., Lucarelli, F., Mandò, P. A., Prati, P., and Zucchiatti, A., Nucl. Inst. and Meth. B136, 975 (1998). 6. Boni, C., Caridi, A., Cereda, E., and Marcazzan, G., Nucl. Inst. and Meth. B47, 1338 (1990). 7. Cahill, T. A., Aerosol Collection and Compositional Analysis for Improve, NPS Annual Report (July 1994June 1995), Department of Physics, University of California, Davis, 1995, pp.1-46. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We thank the local authorities of Florence, Genoa, Milan and Naples for the permission to use structures and data, and for their valuable assistance. 8. Thurston, G. D., and Spengler, J. D., Atmosph. Envir. 19 n.1, 9 (1985). 9. Lucarelli, F., Mandò, P. A., Nava, S., Prati, P., and Zucchiatti, A., Nucl. Inst. and Meth. B161, 819 (2000). 10. Del Carmine, P., Lucarelli, F., Mandò, P.A., Valerio, M., Prati, P., and Zucchiatti, A., Nucl. Inst. and Meth. B150, 450 (1999). REFERENCES 1. PIXE International Corp., P.O. Box 7744, Tallahassee, FL 32316, USA. 11. Marcazzan, G., Nucl. Inst. and Meth. B109, 429 (1996). 2. Ariola, V., D’Alessandro, A., Del Carmine, P., Gagliardi, F., Lucarelli, F., Mandò, P. A., Marcazzan, G., Moro, R., Nava, S., Prati, P., Valli, G., Vecchi, R., and Zucchiatti, A., Nucl. Inst. and Meth. B190, 471 (2002). 451
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