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MOLECULAR & STRUCTURAL CHARACTERIZATION OF COMPLEX ATMOSPHERIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL MIXTURES USING MULTI MODAL SEPARATIONS & HIGH RESOLUTION MASS SPECTROMETRYChristopher P West (7542944) 06 December 2022 (has links)
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<p>Atmospheric aerosols formed through primary emissions, secondary gas-particle formations, and multi-phase chemical processes are composed of solid, semi-solid, or liquid-like particles suspended in the air that have direct implications towards the global radiative balance and human health as air pollutants. Direct emissions of primary organic aerosols (POA; e.g. soot, BrC) and multi-phase formation of secondary organic aerosols (SOA) from the oxidation of biogenic monoterpene isomers represent two important sources/classes of particulate matter in the atmosphere. Multi-phase chemical processes driving the atmospheric and environmental aging through the photochemistry of iron(III), FeIII in organic aerosol particles and aqueous media drives the multiphase chemistry leading to systematic aging of their chemical composition and modifications to resulting light-absorption properties. The molecular composition, organic structures, physical properties, and sources of emissions are complex requiring development of powerful multi-modal analytical metrology, such as high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS) hyphenated with liquid chromatography (LC), photodiode array optical detection, drift tube ion mobility (IM) spectrometry, and desorption and ambient ionization of multi-components mixtures in atmospheric particles using temperature programmed desorption Direct analysis in real time (TPD-DART). Disseminating the molecular-specific composition, chemical and physical properties of complex mixtures in atmospheric organic particles and mixed inorganic/organic systems will help improve our understanding of their formation mechanisms, transformative chemical ageing processes, as well as improved detection of individual components in complex mixtures. </p>
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<p>Chapter 1 and 2 of dissertation introduces complexity of atmospheric organic, carbonaceous aerosols, and complex environmental mixtures and discusses analytical metrology, experiments, and data analysis procedures used for detailed molecular-level characterization of mixtures. Chapter 3 the development of a robust analytical method for untargeted screening and determination of the physical and chemical properties (e.g. vapor pressures, enthalpies of sublimation, and saturation mass concentrations) of single components out of complex SOA particles using temperature programmed desorption Direct analysis in real time ionization – high resolution mass spectrometry (TPD-DART-HRMS). Chapter 4 introduces the use of ion mobility - mass spectrometry (IM-MS) separation and multidimensional characterization of structural isomers in complex SOA mixtures. The chapter discusses the advanced usage of IM-MS to investigate the molecular and structural properties of isomers of alpha-pinene and limonene derived SOA, use of advanced data analysis procedures to resolved complex conformational and structural isomers, and investigate single-molecule structural changes from atmospheric-like ageing in SOA particles using IM-MS. Chapter 5 discusses the chemical characterization and analysis of individual brown carbon (BrC) chromophores out of mixture of colorless organic carbon constituents and insoluble soot particles generated from controlled flame combustion of ethane fuel, a surrogate system representing gasoline combustion of motor vehicles. The chapter focuses on the quantitative method development and use of state-of-the-art liquid chromatography coupled to photodiode array followed by dopant assisted atmospheric pressure photoionization and HRMS (LC-PDA-HRMS) analysis, followed by conversion to quantitative optical information for comparisons with retrieved literature reports. Chapter 6 examines the complex multiphase photochemical cycling of Fe(III)-citrate, a relevant proxy for [FeIII-carboxylate]2+ complexes in atmospheric water using complementary analytical metrology of optical spectroscopy, LC-PDA-HRMS, oil immersion flow microscopy. Multi-modal datasets from these complementary techniques provide a unique experimental description of various stages of FeIII-citrate photochemistry, elucidate individual components of this reacting system, determine mechanistic insights, and quantify environmental parameters affecting the photochemistry. </p>
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Computational and Experimental Investigations Concerning Rare Gas and DPAL Lasers and a Relaxation Kinetics Investigation of the Br<sub>2</sub> + 2NO = 2BrNO EquilibriumSchmitz, Joel R. 19 May 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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<b>Influence of Metal Speciation and Support Properties for Ammonia Oxidation and Other Automotive Exhaust Catalytic Applications</b>Brandon Kyle Bolton (18116749) 07 March 2024 (has links)
<p dir="ltr">Metal speciation and structure can be influenced by the deposition method used during synthesis, interactions with the support, and by post-deposition treatments and reaction conditions experienced during its lifetime of carrying out a catalytic reaction. Supported metal particles of different size contain different surface structures and coordination environments, which may not only influence reaction rates but also the interconversion between agglomerated metallic domains and dispersed metal atom or ion sites. Here, we address the influence of post-deposition treatments and support properties on the structural interconversion of Pd and Cu on aluminosilicate chabazite (CHA) zeolites, Pt on gamma-alumina (γ-Al2O3), and Pd on amorphous oxides (γ-Al2O3, La-doped Al2O3, ΘΔ-Al2O3). The fundamental insights from these studies can be used to design catalysts used widely in automotive exhaust aftertreatment systems, including Pd-exchanged zeolites for passive NOx (x = 1,2) adsorbers (PNA), Cu-exchanged zeolites for NOx (x = 1,2) selective catalytic reduction (SCR), Pt/Al2O3 for NH3 oxidation, and Pd/oxides for three-way catalysts (TWC). Incipient wetness impregnation (IWI) and colloidal methods were used to prepare Pd nanoparticles deposited on CHA zeolites with distinct Pd nanoparticle sizes and distributions. These Pd-CHA samples were used to investigate the effects of Pd particle size distribution on structural interconversion between ion-exchanged Pd and agglomerated Pd domains under realistic operating conditions. Smaller Pd nanoparticles had larger fractions of agglomerated Pd that converted to ion-exchanged Pd2+ sites at fixed air treatment temperatures (598–973 K) and H2O pressures (2–6 kPa H2O), consistent with thermodynamic predictions from DFT calculations. Furthermore, the addition of H2O during air treatment of different Pd nanoparticles (2–14 nm) inhibited the formation of ion-exchanged Pd2+ (thermodynamics), but not the rate of redispersion (kinetics). This demonstrates that, regardless of Pd nanoparticle size, water vapor in automotive exhaust streams facilitate metal sintering in PNA applications. Aqueous-phase exchange of Cu on CHA zeolites with varying support properties (i.e., number of paired Al sites in the 6 membered ring) were used to prepare materials with distinct types and numbers of extraframework Cu species (Cu2+, CuOH+). These Cu-CHA materials were used to analyze Cu structural changes before and after exposure to hydrothermal aging conditions. In the absence of H2O, some Cu2+ sites condense to form binuclear Ox-bridged Cu species that can be reduced with H2 to form Cu-hydride sites and reject H2O, leading to a sub-stoichiometric H2 consumption (H2/Cu < 0.5). In the presence of H2O, all nominally isolated Cu2+ species convert to [CuOH]+ structures, which can subsequently be reduced by H2 to form a Cu-hydride and reject H2O, leading to stoichiometric H2 consumption (H2/Cu ~ 0.5). Furthermore, the presence of H2O led to reduction features in H2 temperature programmed reduction (TPR) profiles that were similar among Cu-CHA materials, regardless of the initial Cu2+ speciation, further supporting the proposal that all nominally isolated Cu2+ sites convert to a similar [CuOH]+ motif. This demonstrates how water influences Cu speciation on CHA materials of varying origin or treatment history, aiding in quantifying SCR-active isolated Cu ions and SCR-inactive Cu species (e.g., CuO, CuAl2O4). Pt supported on γ-Al2O3 were prepared with different average Pt particle sizes (2–13 nm) by increasing the temperature of post-deposition air treatment (523–873 K). This suite of materials was interrogated to isolate the effects of Pt particle size on NH3 oxidation rates and selectivities during conditions relevant to NH3 slip applications in diesel exhaust aftertreatment. For all Pt particle sizes, NH3 oxidation rates displayed a hysteresis with temperature, with high rates measured during temperature decreases than during temperature increases. Smaller Pt particles (2 nm) had lower rates (per surface Pt, quantified by CO chemisorption) than larger Pt particles (13 nm), signifying that NH3 oxidation is a structure-sensitive reaction. Furthermore, surfaces of Pt particles restructure under NH3 oxidation reaction conditions, influencing effective Pt oxidation states, surface structures (numbers and types of exposed Pt sites), and surface coverages of intermediates leading to the observed hysteresis in rate. These findings demonstrate that Pt particles undergo dynamic structural changes during reaction, influencing their ability to convert NH3 to environmentally benign products in NH3 slip applications. The influence of treatment conditions, support properties, and initial Pd particle size and distribution on the kinetics of nanoparticle sintering were investigated to identify which material properties allow maintaining high dispersion to maximize metal utilization for three way catalysts (TWC) during the conversion of regulated pollutants (CO, hydrocarbons, NOx). Pd was deposited by IWI methods to generate polydiserse particle size distributions, and using colloidal Pd nanoparticle solutions to generate monodisperse size distributions, onto various supports (γ-Al2O3, La-doped Al2O3, ΘΔ-Al2O3) and subjected to aging under oxidative and reductive conditions relevant for TWC operation. The average Pd particle size for all materials increased with treatment time under both reductive and oxidative environments. For samples prepared with IWI (i.e., log normal distribution of Pd particle sizes), reductive aging treatments led to higher sintering rates than oxidative treatments. In contrast, for samples prepared using colloidal Pd solutions (i.e., normal distribution of Pd particle sizes), oxidative aging treatments led to higher sintering rates than reduction treatments. Furthermore, after the same treatment condition and time, samples prepared with IWI resulted in higher average Pd particle sizes. These results indicate that more monodisperse initial Pd particle size distributions lead to lower sintering rates, providing guidance to design of supported metal TWCs with improved metal utilization during their lifetimes. Here, the combination of synthesis approaches to prepare a suite of model (e.g., powder) supported metal catalysts of varying structure and composition, interrogated using site and structural characterizations and steady-state and transient kinetic measurements, along with predictions from theoretical calculations, enabled unraveling the influence of material properties and gas environments that affect metal speciation, structure, and oxidation state in real-world aftertreatment systems that use more complex catalytic architectures (e.g., layered washcoats) and reactor designs (e.g., monoliths). This approach provides insights into the fundamental thermodynamic and kinetic factors influencing metal restructuring and interconversion under realistic conditions encountered in automotive exhaust aftertreatment applications, and the kinetic and mechanistic factors that underlie complex phenomena (e.g., reaction rate hysteresis) from data measured in the absence of hydrodynamic artifacts. The overall approach used in this work enabled development of synthesis-structure-function relationships on various metal supported catalysts for automotive exhaust aftertreatment applications, which can provide guidance for material design and treatment strategies to form and retain desired metal structures throughout the material lifetime, including synthesis, reaction, and regeneration treatments.</p>
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Quantum cascade laser spectroscopy : developments and applicationsWalker, Richard James January 2011 (has links)
This thesis presents work examining the characteristics and applicability of quantum cascade lasers. An introduction is given explaining both the desire for a widely tunable, narrow bandwidth device working in the midinfrared, as well as detailing the ways in which quantum cascade lasers (QCLs) fulfill these requirements. The development and manufacture of QCLs are then discussed. The experimental section of this thesis is then split into three parts. Chapter 2 concerns the characterisation and application of several pulsed QCLs. The intrapulse mode of operation is employed and the effect of the resulting rapid frequency chirp upon molecular spectra is investigated in the form of rapid passage signals. The evolution of said rapid passage signals is then investigated as a function of chromophore pressure and identity, with different QCLs, chirp rates, and optical path lengths. The prospect of producing population transfer with chirped lasers is discussed. Chapters 3, 4, and 5 are then concerned with the application and characterisation of continuous wave QCLs. In these chapters a widely tunable commercially produced EC-QCL is utilised as well as two DFB QCLs, one of which is used in tandem with a home-made mount and temperature controller. In Chapter 3 a number of sensitive detection techniques are compared with the employment of wavelength modulation spectroscopy, long path cells and optical cavities, and the narrow bandwidth of QCLs utilised to determine a previously unknown spectral constant of DBr. Chapters 4 and 5 then utilise the high power of an external cavity quantum cascade laser in sub-Doppler Lamb-dip and polarisation spectroscopy measurements and then a pump-probe experiment. The laser linewidth is investigated on a millisecond timescale returning a current noise limited value of c.a. 2 MHz and the fundamental linewidth of the device investigated by altering the injection current. Chapter 5 is concerned with the pump-probe experiment, directly measuring the hot band absorption in a ladder like transition (R(6.5)$_\frac{1}{2}$ $v=1\leftarrow0$ and P(7.5)$_\frac{1}{2}$ $v=1\leftarrow0$). The Bennett peak in the hot band is observed with a DFB-QCL swept at $\sim 0.15$ MHz ns$^{-1}$ and is seen not just as a pump bandwidth limited lineshape, but as a highly velocity selected rapid passage signal. The effect of pressure, pump and probe scan rate and power upon this rapid passage signal is also studied. It is further noted that rapid thermalisation occurs within $v=1$ such that at pressures above c.a. 30 mTorr a broad NO doublet absorption is observed beneath the Bennett peak from which a total population transfer of c.a. $16 \%$ can be estimated. Finally an experiment is discussed in which this population transfer could be increased for use in secondary applications. Chapter 6 then presents initial measurements with two prototype pulsed 3.3 \si{\micro\metre} QCLs considering the prospects of such devices. A Fabry-P\'rot device is first studied using a Fourier transform spectrometer and temperature tuning used to produce a spectrum of the Q-branch of CH$_4$ around 3025 cm$^$. Experiments are then performed using a DFB QCL investigating the chirp rate of the system as an indicator of the rate of heat accumulation within the system. Heat management is of particular consideration when the sea-change is made from pulsed to continuous devices. For this device absorption spectra of two CH$_4$ transitions at 2971 cm$^$ are used to determine the chirp rate, which is found to be c.a. 1.8 GHz ns$^$, at least an order of magnitude higher than that of the longer wavelength pulsed devices considered in Chapter 2.
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Sorption, degradation and transport of estrogens and estrogen sulphates in agricultural soilsScherr, Frank January 2009 (has links)
The fate and behaviour of estrogens in the environment are of concern due to the compounds’ endocrine disruption potential. Estrogens, namely 17β-estradiol (E2), estrone (E1), and estrogen sulphates, i.e. 17β-estradiol-3-sulphate (E2-3S) and estrone-3-sulphate (E1-3S) excreted by livestock constitute a potential source for estrogen contamination in the environment. A method was developed to separate and quantify the hormones by high-performance-liquid-chromatography (HPLC) and ultraviolet detection (UV). A combination of dichloromethane (DCM) and dicyclohexylamine hydrochloride (DCH·HCl) gave recoveries from 97.3 to 107% for E1-3S extraction from aqueous solutions. The recoveries from soil samples ranged from 80.9 to 95.2% (E2-3S), and from 86.3 to 91.7% (E1-3S), respectively. Results of batch sorption studies showed that Freundlich isotherms were nonlinear (N ≠ 1) with Kf values ranging from 34.2 to 57.2, and from 3.42 to 4.18 mg¹-N LN kg⁻¹ for E1, and E1-3S, respectively, indicating the sorption affinity of E1-3S was about an order of magnitude lower than that of E1. The hydrophilic sulphate group of E1-3S possibly shielded the compound from hydrophobic interactions with the soil organic matter and allophanic clay minerals that were proposed as sorbents for E1. Contraction of clay minerals, “salting out” and competitive sorption of artificial urine constituents were likely to have been responsible for observed changes in Freundlich parameters when artificial urine was used as mediator matrix. Plotting the effective distribution coefficient as a function of hypothetical exposure concentrations facilitated the comparison of the sorption behaviour of both compounds as influenced by the mediator solution. The results emphasized that using the CaCl₂ matrix might result in false inferences for the sorption behaviour of these compounds in a dairying environment. The four hormones rapidly degraded in the agricultural soils under aerobic conditions, and the majority of the compounds degraded > 50% within the first 24 hrs. Soil arylsulphatase activities were directly correlated with degradation rate constants of the estrogen sulphates. Estrone was identified as a metabolite of E2 and E1-3S, and these three compounds were observed as metabolites of E2-3S. Single-first order (SFO) and double first-order in parallel (DFOP) kinetics were used to model the degradation and metabolite formation data. The results showed that the DFOP model was in most cases better able to predict the parent compound degradation than the SFO model, and also enabled to estimate accurate degradation endpoints. ER-CALUX® analysis revealed the formation of estrogenicity during E2-3S degradation, which could partly be explained by the formation of the metabolites E2 and E1. Transport studies with E1-3S and E1 showed that the transport and retention of both compounds were significantly influenced by the mediator matrix. While no breakthrough curves (BTCs) were recorded during hormone application in CaCl₂ (10 mM) both hormones were detected in the leachate when applied in artificial urine. Rate-limited sorption processes were proposed for the delayed arrival of the hormone BTCs compared with a conservative bromide tracer. Intense colouration of the leachate during the artificial urine experiments suggested the hormones were likely to be moved by colloid-facilitated transport. Furthermore, the detection of residue hormone and metabolite concentrations implied that degradation of E1-3S and E1 was hampered by urine constituents such as glycine and urea.
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Measurements of Water-soluble Composition of Fine Atmospheric Particulate Matter (PM2.5) and Associated Precursor Gases via Ambient Ion Monitor-ion Chromatography (AIM-IC)Markovic, Milos 30 August 2012 (has links)
Atmospheric fine particulate matter (PM2.5), which is mostly formed in the atmosphere from precursor gases, contributes to numerous environmental and health concerns. Quantifying the ambient concentrations of PM2.5 and precursor gases can be challenging. Hence, many scientific questions about the formation, chemical composition, and gas/particle partitioning of PM2.5 remain unanswered. Ambient Ion Monitor - Ion Chromatography (AIM-IC) was characterized and utilized to measure the water-soluble composition of PM2.5 (dominated by pNH4+, pSO42-, and pNO3-) and associated precursor gases (dominated by NH3(g), SO2(g), and HNO3(g)) during two field campaigns. The AIM-IC detection limits for hourly sampling were determined to be 3 - 45 ng m-3. The response time for “sticky” gases was significantly improved with a nylon denuder membrane. A novel inlet configuration for the AIM-IC, which minimizes sampling inlet losses and carryover in sample analyses, was implemented. Measurements from the BAQS-Met 2007 campaign were utilized to assess the accuracy of the AURAMS model and investigate gas/particle partitioning in SW Ontario. Due to high sulphate levels, NH3(g) was the limiting chemical factor in the formation and gas/particle partitioning of PM2.5. The errors in the predictions of relative humidity and free ammonia were responsible for the poor agreement
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between modelled and measured pNO3- values. The AIM-IC measurements from the CalNex 2010 study were compared to the CMAQ model and utilized to investigate the gas/particle partitioning in Bakersfield, CA. Very high NH3(g) concentrations were observed, and the formation and partitioning of PM2.5 was limited by HNO3(g) and H2SO4. Evidence of rapid removal of HNO3(g) by interactions with super-micron dust particles, and possibly with the alkaline surface was found. CMAQ exhibited significant biases in the predicted concentrations of pSO42-, NH3(g) and HNO3(g).
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Measurements of Water-soluble Composition of Fine Atmospheric Particulate Matter (PM2.5) and Associated Precursor Gases via Ambient Ion Monitor-ion Chromatography (AIM-IC)Markovic, Milos 30 August 2012 (has links)
Atmospheric fine particulate matter (PM2.5), which is mostly formed in the atmosphere from precursor gases, contributes to numerous environmental and health concerns. Quantifying the ambient concentrations of PM2.5 and precursor gases can be challenging. Hence, many scientific questions about the formation, chemical composition, and gas/particle partitioning of PM2.5 remain unanswered. Ambient Ion Monitor - Ion Chromatography (AIM-IC) was characterized and utilized to measure the water-soluble composition of PM2.5 (dominated by pNH4+, pSO42-, and pNO3-) and associated precursor gases (dominated by NH3(g), SO2(g), and HNO3(g)) during two field campaigns. The AIM-IC detection limits for hourly sampling were determined to be 3 - 45 ng m-3. The response time for “sticky” gases was significantly improved with a nylon denuder membrane. A novel inlet configuration for the AIM-IC, which minimizes sampling inlet losses and carryover in sample analyses, was implemented. Measurements from the BAQS-Met 2007 campaign were utilized to assess the accuracy of the AURAMS model and investigate gas/particle partitioning in SW Ontario. Due to high sulphate levels, NH3(g) was the limiting chemical factor in the formation and gas/particle partitioning of PM2.5. The errors in the predictions of relative humidity and free ammonia were responsible for the poor agreement
iii
between modelled and measured pNO3- values. The AIM-IC measurements from the CalNex 2010 study were compared to the CMAQ model and utilized to investigate the gas/particle partitioning in Bakersfield, CA. Very high NH3(g) concentrations were observed, and the formation and partitioning of PM2.5 was limited by HNO3(g) and H2SO4. Evidence of rapid removal of HNO3(g) by interactions with super-micron dust particles, and possibly with the alkaline surface was found. CMAQ exhibited significant biases in the predicted concentrations of pSO42-, NH3(g) and HNO3(g).
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Composition, propriétés et comportement des aérosols atmosphériques, des brouillards, des rosées et des pluies en région bruxelloiseFally, Sophie 13 December 2001 (has links)
La pollution atmosphérique en milieu urbain est un problème préoccupant car une fraction croissante de la population mondiale vit dans les villes. Les effets de la pollution se manifestent également sur la végétation urbaine et sur notre patrimoine architectural, de sorte que c'est la qualité de la vie de l'ensemble des habitants des métropoles de la planète qui est en jeu. Il est indispensable de connaître la composition des atmosphères urbaines et de comprendre les mécanismes qui régissent cette composition pour évaluer les conséquences de la pollution, définir les exigences de réduction des émissions et établir des scénarios des tendances futures.<p><p>L'objectif du présent travail est de déterminer la composition chimique, les propriétés et le comportement des particules et des dépôts humides en Région bruxelloise. On a distingué les aérosols atmosphériques, les brouillards, les rosées (ou givres) récoltés à la fois sur les végétaux et sur un collecteur inerte, les pluies et les dépôts totaux (formés des pluies et des dépôts secs accumulés dans l'entonnoir de collecte en l'absence de pluie). Ce vaste objectif a été réalisé grâce à la collecte de nombreux échantillons sur une échelle de temps suffisante en différents endroits de la capitale, et à l'analyse de ces échantillons par des techniques variées et complémentaires (techniques classiques d'analyse d'échantillons liquides telles que spectrométrie d'absorption et d'émission atomique, chromatographie liquide, colorimétrie, ainsi que microscopie électronique et fluorescence des rayons-X). Trois collecteurs (pour le brouillard, la pluie et la rosée) ont été entièrement conçus et réalisés au laboratoire dans le cadre de ce travail. Les éléments suivants sont analysés: NO3, SO4, NH4, Na, Mg, Al, Si, P, S, CI, K, Ca, Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Ni, Cu, Zn, As, Cd, Pb.<p><p>Afin de comprendre les causes de la variabilité spatio-temporelle des concentrations, l'influence de paramètres tels que la saison, la direction du vent, et le lieu de prélèvement a été examinée. De plus, dans le cas des pluies et des brouillards, l'étude de l'évolution des concentrations au cours d'un même épisode a permis d'investiguer les processus physico-chimiques qui contrôlent le dépôt humide. Elle a permis d'acquérir une meilleure connaissance des mécanismes d'incorporation des aérosols dans la phase aqueuse et du phénomène de lessivage de l'atmosphère. Tout au long de ce travail, les interactions entre la phase particulaire (aérosols) et les phases liquides (brouillards, rosées, pluies) ont été examinées. Une relation entre les concentrations en éléments dissous et le volume d'eau de l'échantillon a été établie dans le cas des pluies, des rosées et des brouillards. Cette relation traduit un effet de dilution et démontre l'importance du mécanisme de condensation-évaporation des gouttes d'eau. L'importance du phénomène de nucléation des sulfates, nitrates et chlorures d'ammonium constitutifs de la fraction fine de l'aérosol soluble a été démontrée. Ces sels d'ammonium sont formés secondairement par des réactions de conversion gaz-particules. L'abondance des ions ammonium, et l'importance de leur action de neutralisation de l'acidité, constituent une particularité de l'atmosphère bruxelloise.<p>L'identification des sources de particules et d'éléments en relation avec leurs propriétés chimiques et granulométriques a été réalisée en utilisant divers outils statistiques (corrélations entre éléments, analyse factorielle) et géochimiques (rapports de concentration, facteurs d'enrichissement, granulométrie). Les apports d'origine marine, continentale, biologique et anthropique (trafic, incinération des déchets, processus de combustion) ont ainsi été clairement mis en évidence dans l'aérosol et le brouillard bruxellois.<p> / Doctorat en Sciences / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
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Characterization, Speciation, and Source Apportionment of Particles inside and from the Exhaust of Public Transit Buses Fueled With Alternative FuelsShandilya, Kaushik K. January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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Surface Plasmons Polaritons and Single Dust ParticlesCilwa, Katherine E. 20 July 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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