Rapid transformation of wildfire emissions to harmful background aerosol

Author:

Vasilakopoulou Christina N.ORCID,Matrali Angeliki,Skyllakou KsakoustiORCID,Georgopoulou Maria,Aktypis AndreasORCID,Florou KalliopiORCID,Kaltsonoudis Christos,Siouti Evangelia,Kostenidou Evangelia,Błaziak AgataORCID,Nenes Athanasios,Papagiannis StefanosORCID,Eleftheriadis KonstantinosORCID,Patoulias DavidORCID,Kioutsioukis IoannisORCID,Pandis Spyros N.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractWildfires are a significant source of organic aerosol during summer, with major impacts on air quality and climate. However, studies in Europe suggest a surprisingly low (less than 10%) contribution of biomass burning organic aerosol to average summertime fine particulate matter levels. In this study we combine field measurements and atmospheric chemical transport modeling, to demonstrate that the contribution of wildfires to fine particle levels in Europe during summer is seriously underestimated. Our work suggests that the corresponding contribution has been underestimated by a factor of 4–7 and that wildfires were responsible for approximately half of the total OA in Europe during July 2022. This discrepancy with previous work is due to the rapid physicochemical transformation of these emissions to secondary oxidized organic aerosol with an accompanying loss of its organic chemical fingerprints. These atmospheric reactions lead to a regionally distributed background organic aerosol that is responsible for a significant fraction of the health-related impacts caused by fine particles in Europe and probably in other continents. These adverse health effects can occur hundreds or even thousands of kilometers away from the fires. We estimate that wildfire emissions are responsible for 15–22% of the deaths in Europe due to exposure to fine particulate matter during summer.

Funder

EC | Horizon 2020 Framework Programme

HFRI Greece, grant 11504.

HFRI Greece, Grant 11504

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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