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On the Speciation of Iodine in Marine Aerosol.
Gómez Martín, Juan Carlos; Saiz-Lopez, Alfonso; Cuevas, Carlos A; Baker, Alex R; Fernández, Rafael P.
  • Gómez Martín JC; Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía CSIC Granada Spain.
  • Saiz-Lopez A; Department of Atmospheric Chemistry and Climate Institute of Physical Chemistry Rocasolano CSIC Madrid Spain.
  • Cuevas CA; Department of Atmospheric Chemistry and Climate Institute of Physical Chemistry Rocasolano CSIC Madrid Spain.
  • Baker AR; Centre for Ocean and Atmospheric Science School of Environmental Sciences University of East Anglia Norwich UK.
  • Fernández RP; Institute for Interdisciplinary Science National Research Council (ICB-CONICET) FCEN-UNCuyo Mendoza Argentina.
J Geophys Res Atmos ; 127(4): e2021JD036081, 2022 Feb 27.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35865333
We have compiled and analyzed a comprehensive data set of field observations of iodine speciation in marine aerosol. The soluble iodine content of fine aerosol (PM1) is dominated by soluble organic iodine (SOI; ∼50%) and iodide (∼30%), while the coarse fraction is dominated by iodate (∼50%), with nonnegligible amounts of iodide (∼20%). The SOI fraction shows an equatorial maximum and minima coinciding with the ocean "deserts," which suggests a link between soluble iodine speciation in aerosol and ocean productivity. Among the major aerosol ions, organic anions and non-sea-salt sulfate show positive correlations with SOI in PM1. Alkali cations are positively correlated to iodate and negatively correlated with SOI and iodide in coarse aerosol. These relationships suggest that under acidic conditions iodate is reduced to HOI, which reacts with organic matter to form SOI, a possible source of iodide. In less acidic sea-salt or dust-rich coarse aerosols, HOI oxidation to iodate and reaction with organic matter likely compete.
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