FY 2025 A worldwide aerosol phenomenology: Elemental and organic carbon in PM2.5 and PM10 Putaud, J.-P., F. Cavalli, K.E. Yttri, J.C. Chow, J.G. Watson, B. Sinha, C. Venkataraman, F. Ikemori, J.-L. Jaffrezo, G. Uzu, I. Moreno, R. Krejci, P. Laj, T. Gupta, M. Hu, S.-W. Kim, O. Mayol-Bracero, P.K. Quinn, W. Aas, A. Alastuey, M. Andrade, M. Angelucci, G. Anurag, P. Beukes, A. Bhardwaj, A. Chatterjee, P. Chaudhary, A.K. Chhangani, S. Conil, A. Degorska, S. Devaliya, A. Dhandapani, S.S. Duhan, U.C. Dumka, G. Habib, Z. Hamzavi, D. Haswani, H. Herrmann, A. Holubova, C. Hueglin, M. Imran, A. Jehangir, T.S. Kapoor, A. Karanasiou, R. Khaiwal, J. Kim, T. Kolesa, J. Kozakiewicz, I. Kranjc, J.S. Laura, Y. Lian, J. Liu, P. Manwani, V. Mardoñez-Balderrama, B. Marticorena, A. Matsuki, S. Mor, S. Mukherjee, S. Murthy, A. Muthalagu, T.A. Najar, R. Naresh Kumar, G. Pandithurai, N. Perez, W. Phairuang, H.C. Phuleria, L. Poulain, L. Prasad, D. Pullokaran, A.M. Qadri, A. Qureshi, O. Ramírez, S. Roy, J. Rüdiger, B.K. Saikia, P. Saikia, S. Sauvage, C. Savvides, R. Sharma, T. Singh, G.K. Singh, R. Spoor, A.K. Srivastava, R. Sunder Raman, P. Van Zyl, M. Vecchiocattivi, C. Voiron, J. Xin, and K. Yadav Atmos. Environ., 358, 121338, doi: 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2025.121338, View open access article at Elsevier (external link) (2025) Elemental carbon (EC), organic carbon (OC), and particulate matter (PM) concentrations in the inhalable (PM10) and fine (PM2.5) size fractions are measured worldwide, albeit with different analytical methods. These measurements from many researchers were collected and analyzed for Africa, America, Asia, and Europe for 2012–2019. EC/PM, OC/PM, and OC/EC ratios were examined based on region, site type, and season to infer potential sources and impacts. These analyses demonstrate that carbonaceous materials are important PM constituents throughout the world. Mean EC/PM ratios were lowest in PM10 in Sahelian Africa and Europe (∼0.01), highest (>0.07) in PM2.5 at urban sites in North America, South America, and Japan. Mean OC/PM ratios were lowest in PM10 in the Sahel (∼0.06) and in PM2.5 in China and Thailand (0.10), and highest in central and eastern Europe (∼0.3) and North America (∼0.4). OC/EC ratios were elevated in western and northern Europe, and at regional background sites in North America. EC/PM increased with PM10 in Thailand, while OC/PM increased with higher PM mass in Thailand, India, and North America, highlighting the specific contribution of carbonaceous aerosols to PM pollution in these regions. At European and North American background sites, OC/EC ratios increased with PM mass. Higher OC/EC ratios in dry periods indicate influence of wildfires, prescribed burns, and secondary aerosol formation. Elevated wintertime EC/PM ratios coincide with residential heating in temperate climate zones. Feature Publications | Outstanding Scientific Publications Contact Sandra Bigley | Help