TY - JOUR
T1 - Morphology and mineralogical composition of sandblasting dust particles from the Taklimakan Desert
AU - Hu, Tafeng
AU - Wu, Feng
AU - Song, Yingpan
AU - Liu, Suixin
AU - Duan, Jing
AU - Zhu, Yuqing
AU - Cao, Junji
AU - Zhang, Daizhou
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2022/8/15
Y1 - 2022/8/15
N2 - The physicochemical characteristics of dust particles from the Taklimakan Desert are the fundamental basis for the assessment of particle variation during their long-distance transport and the subsequent environmental effects. In this study, 43,222 individual sandblasting dust particles, which were mobilised using a chamber with surface soils of sand dunes and Gobi (the two types of surfaces constituting the desert) were analysed to statistically quantify the shape and mineralogical composition of dust particles from the desert. The mode of the number-size distribution of particles from the sand dunes was 0.5–0.7 μm and that of particles from Gobi soils was approximately 1.0 μm. In contrast, the distributions of particle number fractions versus shape factors such as aspect ratio and roundness were similar, despite the irregular shape of the particles. Clay mineral particles were most frequently composed of chlorite and kaolinite, accounting for 66.74 ± 12.08% of the particles from both types of soils. Quartz and feldspar particles accounted for 9.57 ± 4.52% and 2.84 ± 1.28%, respectively. The mineralogical composition of particles smaller than 1.0 μm, in both soil types, was dominated by chlorite (Al-Si-O-Mg), kaolinite (Ai-Si-O), and quartz (Si–O). Gypsum (Ca–S) and halite (Na–Cl) were the major salt components in particles from both soil types. Gypsum-containing particles existed in a wide size range and occupied 3.42%–8.98% of the particles from Gobi soils and 0.27%–2.18% of the particles from sand dunes. Most gypsum-containing particles were mixed with Si-containing minerals in the form of silicate or aluminosilicate; the remaining gypsum-containing particles were gypsum crystals or mixtures of gypsum and Ca-containing minerals. These results provide a comprehensive statistical profile of dust particles released by the sandblasting process from the Taklimakan Desert to the atmosphere.
AB - The physicochemical characteristics of dust particles from the Taklimakan Desert are the fundamental basis for the assessment of particle variation during their long-distance transport and the subsequent environmental effects. In this study, 43,222 individual sandblasting dust particles, which were mobilised using a chamber with surface soils of sand dunes and Gobi (the two types of surfaces constituting the desert) were analysed to statistically quantify the shape and mineralogical composition of dust particles from the desert. The mode of the number-size distribution of particles from the sand dunes was 0.5–0.7 μm and that of particles from Gobi soils was approximately 1.0 μm. In contrast, the distributions of particle number fractions versus shape factors such as aspect ratio and roundness were similar, despite the irregular shape of the particles. Clay mineral particles were most frequently composed of chlorite and kaolinite, accounting for 66.74 ± 12.08% of the particles from both types of soils. Quartz and feldspar particles accounted for 9.57 ± 4.52% and 2.84 ± 1.28%, respectively. The mineralogical composition of particles smaller than 1.0 μm, in both soil types, was dominated by chlorite (Al-Si-O-Mg), kaolinite (Ai-Si-O), and quartz (Si–O). Gypsum (Ca–S) and halite (Na–Cl) were the major salt components in particles from both soil types. Gypsum-containing particles existed in a wide size range and occupied 3.42%–8.98% of the particles from Gobi soils and 0.27%–2.18% of the particles from sand dunes. Most gypsum-containing particles were mixed with Si-containing minerals in the form of silicate or aluminosilicate; the remaining gypsum-containing particles were gypsum crystals or mixtures of gypsum and Ca-containing minerals. These results provide a comprehensive statistical profile of dust particles released by the sandblasting process from the Taklimakan Desert to the atmosphere.
KW - Dust particles
KW - Individual particle analysis
KW - Mineralogical compositions
KW - Shape factors
KW - The Taklimakan Desert
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85129275867
U2 - 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.155315
DO - 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.155315
M3 - 文章
C2 - 35447171
AN - SCOPUS:85129275867
SN - 0048-9697
VL - 834
JO - Science of the Total Environment
JF - Science of the Total Environment
M1 - 155315
ER -