Morphological and Elemental Classification of Freshly‐Emitted Individual Particles From Field and Laboratory Residential Biomass Burning

Author:

Zhang Yinxiao12,Li Weijun23ORCID,Zhang Jian4,Ding Xiaokun5,Yuan Qi6,Liu Lei7ORCID,Xu Liang8,Wang Yuanyuan2,Jiang Xiaotong9ORCID,Ma Wenlai1ORCID,Cao Juan10,Kong Shaofei10ORCID,Liu Dantong2ORCID,Sun Yele3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Flight College, Shandong University of Aeronautics Binzhou China

2. Department of Atmospheric Sciences School of Earth Sciences, Zhejiang University Hangzhou China

3. State Key Laboratory of Atmospheric Boundary Layer Physics and Atmospheric Chemistry Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

4. School of Environmental and Material Engineering Yantai University Yantai China

5. Department of Chemistry Zhejiang University Hangzhou China

6. Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science and Ecology Ocean University of China Qingdao China

7. Zhongfa Aviation Institute of Beihang University Hangzhou China

8. College of Sciences, China Jiliang University Hangzhou China

9. College of Biological and Environmental Engineering, Shandong University of Aeronautics Binzhou China

10. Department of Atmospheric Sciences School of Environmental Studies, China University of Geosciences Wuhan China

Abstract

AbstractResidential biomass burning significantly contributes to air pollution in developing countries. However, the microscopic properties of individual particles in their emissions have not been well understood. In this study, individual primary particles from 14 kinds of biomass fuels (including firewood, crop residue, and animal dung) were collected in laboratory and field measurements, and their morphology, composition and mixing state were acquired using transmission electron microscope. These results constitute a source profile database of individual primary particles from residential biomass burning. The database reveals that different types of biomass fuels exhibit different emission characteristics, that is, residential firewood burning mainly emits pure carbonaceous particles (including organic matter (OM) and soot particles), crop residue burning mainly emits K‐containing particles (including OM‐K, soot(‐OM)‐K, and K‐rich particles), and animal dung burning mainly emits pure carbonaceous particles and K‐containing particles. Moreover, our results indicate that the emission characteristics obtained from laboratory and field measurements are different. Field measurements conducted in two selected villages in North China Plain exhibit a higher presence of soot particles compared to laboratory measurements, owing to their higher combustion temperatures. In contrast, field measurements conducted in one selected village in Qinghai‐Tibet Plateau contain less soot particles than those from laboratory measurements in plain areas, due to the deficient oxygen supply during combustion process in the high‐altitude regions. These results warn us that the emission estimation from residential biomass burning should notice the large emission differences among different biomass types and between field and laboratory measurements.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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