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Modeling aerosol suspension from soils and oceans as sources of micropollutants to air
, M. MacLeod, K. Hungerbühler
Published in Elsevier Ltd
2009
PMID: 19699508
Volume: 77
   
Issue: 4
Pages: 495 - 500
Abstract
Soil and marine aerosol suspension are two physical mass transfer processes that are not usually included in models describing fate and transport of environmental pollutants. Here, we review the literature on soil and marine aerosol suspension and estimate aerosol suspension mass transfer velocities for inclusion in multimedia models, as a global average and on a 1 × 1 scale. The yearly, global average mass transfer velocity for soil aerosol suspension is estimated to be 6 × 10-10 m h-1, approximately an order of magnitude smaller than marine aerosol suspension, which is estimated to be 8 × 10-9 m h-1. Monthly averages of these velocities can be as high as 10-7 m h-1 and 10-5 m h-1 for soil and marine aerosol suspension, respectively, depending on location. We use a unit-world multimedia model to analyze the relevance of these two suspension processes as a mechanism that enhances long-range atmospheric transport of pollutants. This is done by monitoring a metric of long-range transport potential, phi-one thousand (over(φ{symbol}, 1000)), that denotes the fraction of modeled emissions to air, water or soil in a source region that reaches a distance of 1000 km in air. We find that when the yearly, globally averaged mass transfer velocity is used, marine aerosol suspension increases over(φ{symbol}, 1000) only fractionally for both emissions to air and water. However, enrichment of substances in marine aerosols, or speciation between ionic and neutral forms in ocean water may increase the influence of this surface-to-air transfer process. Soil aerosol suspension can be the dominant process for soil-to-air transfer in an emission-to-soil scenario for certain substances that have a high affinity to soil. When a suspension mass transfer velocity near the maximum limit is used, soil suspension remains important if the emissions are made to soil, and marine aerosol suspension becomes important regardless of if emissions are made to air or water compartments. We recommend that multimedia models designed to assess the environmental fate and long-range transport behavior of substances with a range of chemical properties include both aerosol suspension processes, using the mass transfer velocities estimated here. © 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
About the journal
JournalData powered by TypesetChemosphere
PublisherData powered by TypesetElsevier Ltd
ISSN00456535