Low molecular weight (C 1-C 10) monocarboxylic acids, dissolved organic carbon and major inorganic ions in alpine snow pit sequence from a high mountain site, central Japan

Kimitaka Kawamura*, Kohei Matsumoto, Eri Tachibana, Kazuma Aoki

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

27 Scopus citations

Abstract

Snowpack samples were collected from a snow pit sequence (6 m in depth) at the Murodo-Daira site near the summit of Mt. Tateyama, central Japan, an outflow region of Asian dusts. The snow samples were analyzed for a homologous series of low molecular weight normal (C 1-C 10) and branched (iC 4-iC 6) monocarboxylic acids as well as aromatic (benzoic) and hydroxy (glycolic and lactic) acids, together with major inorganic ions and dissolved organic carbon (DOC). The molecular distributions of organic acids were characterized by a predominance of acetic (range 7.8-76.4 ng g -1-snow, av. 34.8 ng g -1) or formic acid (2.6-48.1 ng g -1, 27.7 ng g -1), followed by propionic acid (0.6-5.2 ng g -1, 2.8 ng g -1). Concentrations of normal organic acids generally decreased with an increase in carbon chain length, although nonanoic acid (C 9) showed a maximum in the range of C 5-C 10. Higher concentrations were found in the snowpack samples containing dust layer. Benzoic acid (0.18-4.1 ng g -1, 1.4 ng g -1) showed positive correlation with nitrate (r = 0.70), sulfate (0.67), Na + (0.78), Ca 2+ (0.86) and Mg + (0.75), suggesting that this aromatic acid is involved with anthropogenic sources and Asian dusts. Higher concentrations of Ca 2+ and SO 4 2- were found in the dusty snow samples. We found a weak positive correlation (r = 0.43) between formic acid and Ca 2+, suggesting that gaseous formic acid may react with Asian dusts in the atmosphere during long-range transport. However, acetic acid did not show any positive correlations with major inorganic ions. Hydroxyacids (0.03-5.7 ng g -1, 1.5 ng g -1) were more abundant in the granular and dusty snow. Total monocarboxylic acids (16-130 ng g -1, 74 ng g -1) were found to account for 1-6% of DOC (270-1500 ng g -1, 630 ng g -1) in the snow samples.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)272-280
Number of pages9
JournalAtmospheric Environment
Volume62
DOIs
StatePublished - 2012/12

Keywords

  • Acetic acid
  • Asian dust
  • Calcium
  • Formic acid
  • Glycolic acid
  • High mountain snowpack
  • Lactic acid
  • Propionic acid
  • Sulfate

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Environmental Science
  • Atmospheric Science

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