Elemental composition of mineral aerosol generated from Sudan Sahara Sand

Citation
Mah. Eltayeb et al., Elemental composition of mineral aerosol generated from Sudan Sahara Sand, J ATMOS CH, 40(3), 2001, pp. 247-273
Citations number
35
Categorie Soggetti
Environment/Ecology,"Earth Sciences
Journal title
JOURNAL OF ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY
ISSN journal
01677764 → ACNP
Volume
40
Issue
3
Year of publication
2001
Pages
247 - 273
Database
ISI
SICI code
0167-7764(2001)40:3<247:ECOMAG>2.0.ZU;2-5
Abstract
Eighteen soil samples from central Sudan were fractionated by dry sieving i n a size fraction from < 45 mum to > 300 mum while aerosols generated from these soils were fractionated in the particle size range from 0.25 mum to > 16 mum. The elemental concentrations of soil samples were determined by en ergy-dispersive X-ray fluorescence, while the elemental concentrations of g enerated aerosols were analysed by particle-induced X-ray emission. The ele ments Al, K and Rb show a slight positive fractionation with decreasing par ticle size throughout the particle size range studied. The concentrations o f Ca, Mn, Fe, Sr and Y are maximum in the small soil size fraction (< 45 mu m) and decrease for the coarse soil size fractions, while in the mineral ae rosol particle sizes (0.25-> 16 mum) the concentrations remain more or less constant. The size distributions for Cr, Ti and Zr show a maximum in the p article size range 45-100 mum and the concentrations of these elements decr ease sharply in the aerosol fraction down to 16 mum to remain constant in t he smaller aerosol fractions. Enrichment factors for the elements were calculated relative to five refere nce materials: average crustal rock, average soil, the investigated Sahara bulk soil, the finest fraction of this soil and the aerosol generated from this soil, and using four reference elements: Al, Si, Ti and Fe. The enrich ment factors were found to vary significantly depending on the choice of th e reference material or the reference element. The enrichment factors for t he Sudan mineral aerosol were almost identical to those for Khartoum atmosp heric aerosol but different from those for Namib mineral aerosol and Israel atmospheric aerosol following dust storms. Multivariate display methods (c luster analysis, principal component analysis and linear discriminant analy sis) were applied to the element ratios in the mineral aerosol from the Sah ara and Namib and this showed that these mineral aerosol can be differentia ted into different groups. An attempt was also made to relate the mineral a erosol to its parent soil through the use of these multivariate techniques and the elemental ratios in both the mineral aerosols and the bulk soils (N amib and Sahara). It was also possible using the elemental ratios and the m ultivariate display methods to associate the crustal component to the miner al aerosol generated from the Sahara.