Global Importance of Hydroxymethanesulfonate in Ambient Particulate Matter: Implications for Air Quality

Jonathan Moch1, Eleni Dovrou2, Loretta Mickley3, Frank Keutsch4, Zirui Liu5, Yuesi Wang6, Tracy Dombek7, Mikinori Kuwata8, Stefano Decesari9, Marco Paglione10 and Daniel Jacob11

Sulfur compounds are an important constituent of particulate matter, with impacts on climate and public health. While most sulfur observed in particulate matter has been assumed to be sulfate, laboratory experiments reveal that hydroxymethanesulfonate (HMS), an adduct formed by aqueous phase chemical reaction of dissolved HCHO and SO2, may be easily misinterpreted in measurements as sulfate. Here we present observational and modeling evidence for a ubiquitous global presence of HMS. We find that filter samples collected in Shijiazhuang, China, and examined with ion chromatography within 9 days show as much as 7.6 μg m−3 of HMS, while samples from Singapore examined 9–18 months after collection reveal ~0.6 μg m−3 of HMS. The Shijiazhuang samples show only minor traces of HMS 4 months later, suggesting that HMS had decomposed over time during sample storage. In contrast, the Singapore samples do not clearly show a decline in HMS concentration over 2 months of monitoring. Measurements from over 150 sites, primarily derived from the IMPROVE network across the United States, suggest the ubiquitous presence of HMS in at least trace amounts as much as 60 days after collection. The degree of possible HMS decomposition in the IMPROVE observations is unknown. Using the GEOS‐Chem chemical transport model, we estimate that HMS may account for 10% of global particulate sulfur in continental surface air and over 25% in many polluted regions. Our results suggest that reducing emissions of HCHO and other volatile organic compounds may have a co‐benefit of decreasing particulate sulfur.

 

1Harvard University, jmoch@g.harvard.edu
2Harvard University, dovrouel@gmail.com
3Harvard University, mickley@fas.harvard.edu
4Harvard University, keutsch@seas.harvard.edu
5Chinese Academy of Sciences, liuzirui@mail.iap.ac.cn
6Chinese Academy of Sciences, wys@mail.iap.ac.cn
7RTI International, tdombek@rti.org
8Peking University, kuwata@pku.edu.cn
9Italian National Research Council ‐ Institute of Atmospheric Sciences and Climate (CNR‐ISAC), s.decesari@isac.cnr.it
10Italian National Research Council ‐ Institute of Atmospheric Sciences and Climate (CNR‐ISAC), M.Paglione@isac.cnr.it
11Harvard University, djacob@fas.harvard.edu