Study of black sand particles from sand dunes in Badr, Saudi Arabia using electron microscopy

Haider Abbas Khwaja*, Omar Siraj Aburizaiza, Daniel L. Hershey, Azhar Siddique, P. E.David A. Guerrieri, Jahan Zeb, Mohammad Abbass, Donald R. Blake, Mirza Mozammel Hussain, Abdullah Jameel Aburiziza, Malissa A. Kramer, Isobel J. Simpson

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Particulate air pollution is a health concern. This study determines the microscopic make-up of different varieties of sand particles collected at a sand dune site in Badr, Saudi Arabia in 2012. Three categories of sand were studied: black sand, white sand, and volcanic sand. The study used multiple high resolution electron microscopies to study the morphologies, emission source types, size, and elemental composition of the particles, and to evaluate the presence of surface "coatings or contaminants" deposited or transported by the black sand particles. White sand was comprised of natural coarse particles linked to wind-blown releases from crustal surfaces, weathering of igneous/metamorphic rock sources, and volcanic activities. Black sand particles exhibited different morphologies and microstructures (surface roughness) compared with the white sand and volcanic sand. Morphological Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) and Laser Scanning Microscopy (LSM) analyses revealed that the black sand contained fine and ultrafine particles (50 to 500 nm ranges) and was strongly magnetic, indicating the mineral magnetite or elemental iron. Aqueous extracts of black sands were acidic (pH = 5.0). Fe, C, O, Ti, Si, V, and S dominated the composition of black sand. Results suggest that carbon and other contaminant fine particles were produced by fossil-fuel combustion and industrial emissions in heavily industrialized areas of Haifa and Yanbu, and transported as cloud condensation nuclei to Douf Mountain. The suite of techniques used in this study has yielded an in-depth characterization of sand particles. Such information will be needed in future environmental, toxicological, epidemiological, and source apportionment studies.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1175-1194
Number of pages20
JournalAtmosphere
Volume6
Issue number8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2015
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Particulate
  • Sand
  • Saudi Arabia
  • Scanning electron microscopy
  • Urban aerosols

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