Abstract :
Aerosol particles were collected in different environments in Poland—in Legnica, a middle size town situated close to big copper works and in a
rural site in the suburbs of Krako´w, the city three times bigger than Legnica. Bulk analysis of particulate matter collected on quartz-fibre filters was
performed using spark source mass spectrometry (SSMS). Analysis of airborne particles from urban and rural environments revealed differences in
partial concentration of 20 selected elements. In urban aerosol collected in Legnica we found more: Pb, Cr—20 times than in the rural environment,
As, Sr—10 times, Co—7 times, Cl—5 times, V, Y—3 times, Ti, Mn, Cu, Se—2 times and Fe, Ni, Zn, Br, Zr, Mo almost 2 times more than in the
rural environment.
Secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) depth profile analyses were performed for aerosol particles collected at Al-foils with the use of ninestage
rotating plates cascade impactor. SIMS results obtained with the use of 5 keV Ar+ ion sputtering show ‘‘core-shell’’ structure of urban and
rural particles dependent of their grain size in the range of 300 nm to 15 mm. Ultra fine (300–500 nm diameter) rural particles have shell layers
enriched in iron and manganese, while such enrichment is typical for coarse (5–10 mm diameter) urban particles.
Keywords :
Airborne particles , Atmospheric aerosol , core-shell structure , SIMS depth profiling