Abstract An air quality monitoring campaign by passive sampling techniques was carried out, for the first time, between November 2016 and January 2017 on the Cape Verdean island of Fogo,… Click to show full abstract
Abstract An air quality monitoring campaign by passive sampling techniques was carried out, for the first time, between November 2016 and January 2017 on the Cape Verdean island of Fogo, whose volcanic mountain rises up to 2829 m. Levels of SO 2 and acid gases (HF, HCl, HNO 3 , H 2 SO 4 and H 3 PO 4 ) were, in most cases, below the detection limits. Alkylpentanes, hexane, cycloalkanes and toluene were the dominant volatile organic compounds. The m,p-xylene/ethylbenzene ratios revealed that air masses arriving at Cape Verde have been subjected to significant aging processes. High toluene/benzene ratios suggested extra sources of toluene in addition to vehicle emissions. Deposition rates of total settleable dust ranged from 23 to 155 mg/m 2 /day. On average, organic carbon accounted for 15.6% of the dust mass, whereas elemental carbon was generally undetected. Minerals comprised the dominant mass fraction. The dust levels were mostly affected by two main airflows: the westerlies and the Saharan Air Layer. These air masses contributed to the transport of mineral dust from desert regions, secondary inorganic constituents (SO 4 2− , NO 3 − and NH 4 + ) and tracers of biomass burning emissions, such as potassium. Sea salt represented 12% of the mass of settleable dust. Scanning electron microscope observations of several particles with different compositions, shapes and sizes revealed high silica mass fractions in all samples, as well as variable contents of carbonates, sulphates, aluminosilicates, Fe, Ti, F and NaCl, suggesting that, in addition to the already mentioned sources, dust is likely linked to industrial emissions in the northern and north-western coast of the African continent. Although some atmospheric constituents presented higher concentrations near the crater, the small fumarolic activity still present after cessation of the eruption in February 2015 has a limited impact on air quality, which is most affected by long range transport and some local sources at specific locations.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.