Be. Hartsell et al., RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN PEROXYACETYL NITRATE, O-3, AND NOY AT THE RURALSOUTHERN OXIDANTS STUDY SITE IN CENTRAL PIEDMONT, NORTH-CAROLINA, SITE SONIA, JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 99(D10), 1994, pp. 21033-21041
Ambient peroxyacetyl nitrate (PAN) concentrations were measured during
June and early July 1992 at site SONIA (Southeast Oxidants and Nitrog
en Intensive Analysis), a rural site in the central Piedmont region of
North Carolina, as part of the Southern Oxidants Study. PAN measureme
nts were made as part of an effort to provide a comprehensive chemical
climatology and to investigate the total nitrogen budget at this site
. Gas chromatograph-electron capture detector (GC-ECD) was used to mea
sure PAN every 15 min with a detection limit of 50 parts per trillion
by volume. During the measurement period, maximum ambient levels of PA
N reached 1.2 parts per billion by volume and averaged 0.41 +/- 0.24 p
pbv (n=1972) with an average daily maximum of 0.60 ppbv. The average d
aytime (0900-2100 EST) concentration was 0.52 +/- 0.24 ppbv (n=986) wh
ile the average nighttime (2100-0900) concentration was 0.29 +/- 0.07
ppbv (n=986). The O-3/PAN ratio was found to be 138 +/- 98 (n=984) and
the PAN/NOy ratio was 0.12 +/- 0.11 (n=454). Hourly average PAN and O
-3 concentrations showed a strong correlation with R=0.57 (n=984). Mor
eover, the composite hourly averages of PAN and O-3 for the entire mea
surement period showed an even stronger correlation of R=0.95. The str
ong correlation between O-3 and PAN suggest that mesoscale photochemic
al production plays a major role in PAN chemistry at site SONIA. An an
alysis of 10 m meteorological data suggests some correlation between r
egional meteorological conditions and between both the daily PAN maxim
a and the magnitude of the O-3/PAN ratio.