1. Effectiveness of airborne radon progeny assessment for atmospheric studies.
- Author
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Crova, F., Valli, G., Bernardoni, V., Forello, A.C., Valentini, S., and Vecchi, R.
- Subjects
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RADON , *RADIOISOTOPES , *ATMOSPHERIC aerosols , *MIXING height (Atmospheric chemistry) , *SOLAR radiation , *WEATHER - Abstract
In this paper, measurements of short- and long-lived Radon progeny attached to atmospheric fine aerosols are reported. Hourly measurements of 222Rn short-lived decay products (i.e. 214Bi via on-line alpha spectrometry on 214Po) in the atmosphere were carried out in Milan (Italy) from 1999 to 2016; 214Bi mean concentrations ranged from 0.2 to 38.1 Bq m−3. It is noteworthy that minima occurred in springtime although the strongest convective turbulence can be expected in summer, when the highest solar radiation is available; one order of magnitude higher values were observed in winter when the Po valley experienced poor atmospheric dilution. The Theil-Sen method was applied to investigate the long-time trend in de-seasonalised data series. Results showed that - although inter/intra-annual variations in 214Bi concentrations were observed in connection with differences in atmospheric dispersion conditions – no statistically significant trend over the investigated period was detected. On a sub-set of these samples, also weekly 210Pb concentrations were determined via off-line alpha spectrometry on 210Po; atmospheric activity concentration values ranged between 0.13 and 3.05 mBq m−3. The seasonal behaviour of 210Pb concentrations followed fairly well the 214Bi temporal pattern, showing that mixing layer dynamics is paramount in determining short- and long-lived Radon progeny levels in the atmosphere. From 210Pb/214Bi activity ratio, the residence time τ res of fine aerosols in the atmosphere was estimated to be on average 1 day, ranging from 11.0 to 55.3 h without any evident temporal trend. By exploiting the availability of mixing layer height data at our site, an alternative approach to estimate aerosol residence time was tested; this was based on a simple relationship relying on deposition velocity (from literature data) and mixing layer height (available at our monitoring station). Mean experimental τ res resulted in 1.2 days which was comprised in the 0.6–2.0 days range estimated by the alternative method. This result brings a noteworthy contribution to the scientific debate about differences among aerosol residence time estimates obtained by different radioactive parent-daughter couple; our results show that the 210Pb/214Bi (or equivalently 210Pb/222Rn) couple provides reliable estimates. Unlabelled Image • Natural radioactive isotopes are effective tracers to study atmospheric processes. • Fine aerosol residence times retrieved through long- and short-lived Radon progeny. • Fine aerosol residence times in Milan ranged between 11 and 55 h. • Residence time reliability assessed by deposition velocity and mixing layer height. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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