Balasus, NicholasBattaglia, Michael A.Ball, KatherineCaicedo, VanessaDelgado, RubenCarlton, Annmarie G.Hennigan, Christopher J.2021-06-042021-06-042021-05-18Balasus, Nicholas; Battaglia, Michael A.; Ball, Katherine; Caicedo, Vanessa; Delgado, Ruben; Carlton, Annmarie G.; Hennigan, Christopher J.; Urban aerosol chemistry at a land-water transition site during summer – Part 1: Impact of agricultural and industrial ammonia emissions; Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, May 18, 2021; https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-2021-365https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-2021-365http://hdl.handle.net/11603/21681This study characterizes the impact of the Chesapeake Bay and associated meteorological phenomena on aerosol chemistry during the second Ozone Water-Land Environmental Transition Study (OWLETS-2) field campaign during summer 2018. Measurements of inorganic PM₂.₅ composition, gas-phase ammonia (NH₃), and an array of meteorological parameters were undertaken at Hart-Miller Island (HMI), a land-water transition site just east of downtown Baltimore on the Chesapeake Bay. The observations at HMI were characterized by abnormally high NH₃ concentrations (maximum of 19.3 μg m⁻³, average of 3.83 μg m⁻³), which were more than a factor of three higher than NH₃ levels measured at the closest Atmospheric Ammonia Network (AMoN) site (approximately 45 km away). While sulfate concentrations at HMI agreed quite well with those measured at a regulatory monitoring station 45 km away, aerosol ammonium and nitrate concentrations were significantly higher, due to the ammonia-rich conditions that resulted from the elevated NH₃. The high NH₃ concentrations were largely due to regional agricultural emissions, including dairy farms in southeastern Pennsylvania and poultry operations in the Delmarva Peninsula (Delaware-Maryland-Virginia). Reduced NH₃ deposition during transport over the Chesapeake Bay likely contributed to enhanced concentrations at HMI compared to the more inland AMoN site. Several peak NH₃ events were recorded, including the maximum NH₃ observed during OWLETS-2, that appear to originate from a cluster of industrial sources near downtown Baltimore. Such events were all associated with nighttime emissions and advection to HMI under low 15 wind speeds (< 1 m s⁻¹) and stable atmospheric conditions. Our results demonstrate the importance of industrial sources, including several that are not represented in the emissions inventory, on urban air quality. Together with our companion paper, which examines aerosol liquid water and pH during OWLETS-2, we highlight unique processes affecting urban air quality of coastal cities that are distinct from continental locations.2 filesen-USThis item is likely protected under Title 17 of the U.S. Copyright Law. Unless on a Creative Commons license, for uses protected by Copyright Law, contact the copyright holder or the author.Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)Urban aerosol chemistry at a land-water transition site during summer – Part 1: Impact of agricultural and industrial ammonia emissionsText