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Creators/Authors contains: "Weber, Rodney"

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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available October 13, 2026
  2. Fairbanks-North Star Borough, Alaska (FNSB) regularly experiences some of the worst wintertime air quality in the United States. 
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  3. Abstract Most fine ambient particulate matter (PM2.5)-based epidemiological models use globalized concentration-response (CR) functions assuming that the toxicity of PM2.5is solely mass-dependent without considering its chemical composition. Although oxidative potential (OP) has emerged as an alternate metric of PM2.5toxicity, the association between PM2.5mass and OP on a large spatial extent has not been investigated. In this study, we evaluate this relationship using 385 PM2.5samples collected from 14 different sites across 4 different continents and using 5 different OP (and cytotoxicity) endpoints. Our results show that the relationship between PM2.5mass vs. OP (and cytotoxicity) is largely non-linear due to significant differences in the intrinsic toxicity, resulting from a spatially heterogeneous chemical composition of PM2.5. These results emphasize the need to develop localized CR functions incorporating other measures of PM2.5properties (e.g., OP) to better predict the PM2.5-attributed health burdens. 
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  4. The prevailing view for aqueous secondary aerosol formation is that it occurs in clouds and fogs, owing to the large liquid water content compared to minute levels in fine particles. Our research indicates that this view may need reevaluation due to enhancements in aqueous reactions in highly concentrated small particles. Here, we show that low temperature can play a role through a unique effect on particle pH that can substantially modulate secondary aerosol formation. Marked increases in hydroxymethanesulfonate observed under extreme cold in Fairbanks, Alaska, demonstrate the effect. These findings provide insight on aqueous chemistry in fine particles under cold conditions expanding possible regions of secondary aerosol formation that are pH dependent beyond conditions of high liquid water. 
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  5. Abstract. Fairbanks, Alaska, is a sub-Arctic city that frequently suffers from the non-attainment of national air quality standards in the wintertime due to the coincidence of weak atmospheric dispersion and increased local emissions. As part of the Alaskan Layered Pollution and Chemical Analysis (ALPACA) campaign, we deployed a Chemical Analysis of Aerosol Online (CHARON) inlet coupled with a proton transfer reaction time-of-flight mass spectrometer (PTR-ToF MS) and an Aerodyne high-resolution aerosol mass spectrometer (AMS) to measure organic aerosol (OA) and non-refractory submicron particulate matter (NR-PM1), respectively. We deployed a positive matrix factorization (PMF) analysis for the source identification of NR-PM1. The AMS analysis identified three primary factors: biomass burning, hydrocarbon-like, and cooking factors, which together accounted for 28 %, 38 %, and 11 % of the total OA, respectively. Additionally, a combined organic and inorganic PMF analysis revealed two further factors: one enriched in nitrates and another rich in sulfates of organic and inorganic origin. The PTRCHARON factorization could identify four primary sources from residential heating: one from oil combustion and three from wood combustion, categorized as low temperature, softwood, and hardwood. Collectively, all residential heating factors accounted for 79 % of the total OA. Cooking and road transport were also recognized as primary contributors to the overall emission profile provided by PTRCHARON. All PMF analyses could apportion a single oxygenated secondary organic factor. These results demonstrate the complementarity of the two instruments and their ability to describe the complex chemical composition of PM1 and related sources. This work further demonstrates the capability of PTRCHARON to provide both qualitative and quantitative information, offering a comprehensive understanding of the OA sources. Such insights into the sources of submicron aerosols can ultimately assist environmental regulators and citizens in improving the air quality in Fairbanks and in rapidly urbanizing regional sub-Arctic areas. 
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  6. Free, publicly-accessible full text available June 16, 2026
  7. Abstract. Brown carbon (BrC) consists of particulate organic species that preferentially absorb light at visible and ultraviolet wavelengths. Ambient studies show that as a component of aerosol particles, BrC affects photochemical reaction rates and regional to global climate. Some organic chromophores are especially toxic, linking BrC to adverse health effects. The lack of direct measurements of BrC has limited our understanding of its prevalence, sources, evolution, and impacts. We describe the first direct, online measurements of water-soluble BrC on research aircraft by three separate instruments. Each instrument measured light absorption over a broad wavelength range using a liquid waveguide capillary cell (LWCC) and grating spectrometer, with particles collected into water by a particle-into-liquid sampler (CSU PILS-LWCC and NOAA PILS-LWCC) or a mist chamber (MC-LWCC). The instruments were deployed on the NSF C-130 aircraft during WE-CAN 2018 as well as the NASA DC-8 and the NOAA Twin Otter aircraft during FIREX-AQ 2019, where they sampled fresh and moderately aged wildfire plumes. Here, we describe the instruments, calibrations, data analysis and corrections for baseline drift and hysteresis. Detection limits (3σ) at 365 nm were 1.53 Mm−1 (MC-LWCC; 2.5 min sampling time), 0.89 Mm−1 (CSU PILS-LWCC; 30 s sampling time), and 0.03 Mm−1 (NOAA PILS-LWCC; 30 s sampling time). Measurement uncertainties were 28 % (MC-LWCC), 12 % (CSU PILS-LWCC), and 11 % (NOAA PILS-LWCC). The MC-LWCC system agreed well with offline measurements from filter samples, with a slope of 0.91 and R2=0.89. Overall, these instruments provide soluble BrC measurements with specificity and geographical coverage that is unavailable by other methods, but their sensitivity and time resolution can be challenging for aircraft studies where large and rapid changes in BrC concentrations may be encountered. 
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