You need JavaScript to view this

Wet and dry deposition of acid-forming atmospheric trace substances. Die trockene und feuchte Deposition saeurebildender atmosphaerischer Spurenstoffe

Abstract

Wet/dry measurements have shown that wet deposition plays a dominant part in scavenging sulphate, nitrate and chloride vis-a-vis dry deposition of aerosol particles. In contrast to regional distribution of SO/sub 2/ and NOsub(x) concentrations, regional distributions of sulphate and nitrate concentrations in the rain show but minor regional differences between polluted and clean-air regions. Increased trace substance concentrations in precipitation are observed with low-amount precipitation. Deposition of free acids is of some interests for an evaluation of the effect of ''acid'' precipitations on ecosystems. In areas of high SO/sub 2/ and NO/sub 2/ concentrations, potential acid deposition by dry-deposited SO/sub 2/ and NOsub(i) may contribute more to acid deposition than wet H/sup +/ deposition. In urban and rural regions, an enrichment of nitrate was found in the rain as opposed to the aerosol on comparing the sulphate/nitrate ratio in rain and aerosol.
Authors:
Publication Date:
Dec 16, 1982
Product Type:
Technical Report
Report Number:
NP-4770377
Reference Number:
FRG-84-06414; EDB-84-159595
Resource Relation:
Other Information: Diss. (Dr.rer.nat.). Portions are illegible in microfiche products
Subject:
54 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES; ACID RAIN; ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS; NITRATES; DEPOSITION; SULFATES; AEROSOLS; GASES; SAMPLE PREPARATION; TRACE AMOUNTS; WASHOUT; ATMOSPHERIC PRECIPITATIONS; COLLOIDS; DISPERSIONS; FLUIDS; NITROGEN COMPOUNDS; OXYGEN COMPOUNDS; PRECIPITATION SCAVENGING; RAIN; SEPARATION PROCESSES; SOLS; SULFUR COMPOUNDS; 500200* - Environment, Atmospheric- Chemicals Monitoring & Transport- (-1989); 520200 - Environment, Aquatic- Chemicals Monitoring & Transport- (-1989); 510200 - Environment, Terrestrial- Chemicals Monitoring & Transport- (-1989)
OSTI ID:
8123804
Research Organizations:
Frankfurt Univ. (Germany, F.R.). Fachbereich Geowissenschaften
Country of Origin:
Germany
Language:
German
Other Identifying Numbers:
Other: ON: DE84770377
Availability:
NTIS (US Sales Only), PC A10/MF A01; 1.
Submitting Site:
DE
Size:
Pages: 207
Announcement Date:
Jun 01, 1984

Citation Formats

Perseke, C. Wet and dry deposition of acid-forming atmospheric trace substances. Die trockene und feuchte Deposition saeurebildender atmosphaerischer Spurenstoffe. Germany: N. p., 1982. Web.
Perseke, C. Wet and dry deposition of acid-forming atmospheric trace substances. Die trockene und feuchte Deposition saeurebildender atmosphaerischer Spurenstoffe. Germany.
Perseke, C. 1982. "Wet and dry deposition of acid-forming atmospheric trace substances. Die trockene und feuchte Deposition saeurebildender atmosphaerischer Spurenstoffe." Germany.
@misc{etde_8123804,
title = {Wet and dry deposition of acid-forming atmospheric trace substances. Die trockene und feuchte Deposition saeurebildender atmosphaerischer Spurenstoffe}
author = {Perseke, C}
abstractNote = {Wet/dry measurements have shown that wet deposition plays a dominant part in scavenging sulphate, nitrate and chloride vis-a-vis dry deposition of aerosol particles. In contrast to regional distribution of SO/sub 2/ and NOsub(x) concentrations, regional distributions of sulphate and nitrate concentrations in the rain show but minor regional differences between polluted and clean-air regions. Increased trace substance concentrations in precipitation are observed with low-amount precipitation. Deposition of free acids is of some interests for an evaluation of the effect of ''acid'' precipitations on ecosystems. In areas of high SO/sub 2/ and NO/sub 2/ concentrations, potential acid deposition by dry-deposited SO/sub 2/ and NOsub(i) may contribute more to acid deposition than wet H/sup +/ deposition. In urban and rural regions, an enrichment of nitrate was found in the rain as opposed to the aerosol on comparing the sulphate/nitrate ratio in rain and aerosol.}
place = {Germany}
year = {1982}
month = {Dec}
}