Current guidance by leading public health agencies recommends wearing a 3-layer cloth-based face mask with a middle non-woven material insert to reduce the transmission of infectious respiratory viruses like SARS-CoV-2....
Chloramines (NH2Cl, NHCl2, and NCl3) are toxic compounds that can be created during the use of bleach-based disinfectants that contain hypochlorous acid (HOCl) and the hypochlorite ion (OCl-) as their...
Ambient
0.5 Hz hydrogen chloride (HCl) measurements were made in
Canadian cities to investigate chlorine activation and constrain the
tropospheric chlorine budget. Springtime HCl mixing ratios in a coastal
city (St. John’s, NL) were up to 1200 parts per trillion by
volume (pptv) with a median of 63 pptv and were consistently elevated
during daytime. High time-resolution measurements allowed the attribution
of events to general sources, including direct emissions. Most coastal
HCl was related to sea-salt aerosol acid displacement (R1) and chlorine
activation. Continental urban (Toronto, ON) wintertime HCl mixing
ratios reached up to 541 and 172 pptv, with medians of 67 and 11 pptv
during two sampling periods characterized by different wind directions.
The absence of consistent relationships with NO
x
, temperature, and wind direction, as well as a lack of
diurnal patterns, suggested uncharacterized direct sources of HCl.
One period with road salting occurred during sampling, but no relationship
to changes in HCl observations was found. The contribution of road
salt to the measured HCl may have been masked by larger contributors
(such as direct sources of HCl) or perhaps the relationship between
HCl and road salt application is not immediate, and thus additional
measurements over multiple salting events or between seasons would
be required. GEOS-Chem modeled HCl temporal variations in mixing ratios
agreed well with coastal measurements only. The measured mixing ratios
were underestimated by the model in both locations, but to a greater
degree (up to 3 orders of magnitude) in the continental city. The
discrepancy between the model and measurements for the continental
wintertime city emphasizes the need for a greater understanding of
direct sources of HCl and the impact of road salt.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.