The vertical distribution of biomass burning pollution over tropical South America from aircraft in situ measurements during SAMBBA
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Published:2019-05-03
Issue:9
Volume:19
Page:5771-5790
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Darbyshire EoghanORCID, Morgan William T., Allan James D.ORCID, Liu DantongORCID, Flynn Michael J., Dorsey James R., O'Shea Sebastian J.ORCID, Lowe DouglasORCID, Szpek KateORCID, Marenco FrancoORCID, Johnson Ben T.ORCID, Bauguitte Stephane, Haywood Jim M., Brito Joel F.ORCID, Artaxo PauloORCID, Longo Karla M., Coe Hugh
Abstract
Abstract. We examine processes driving the vertical distribution of biomass burning
pollution following an integrated analysis of over 200 pollutant and
meteorological profiles measured in situ during the South AMerican Biomass
Burning Analysis (SAMBBA) field experiment. This study will aid future work
examining the impact of biomass burning on weather, climate and air quality. During the dry season there were significant contrasts in the composition
and vertical distribution of haze between western and eastern regions of
tropical South America. Owing to an active or residual convective mixing
layer, the aerosol abundance was similar from the surface to ∼1.5 km in the west and ∼3 km in the east. Black carbon mass
loadings were double as much in the east (1.7 µg m−3) than the west (0.85 µg m−3), but aerosol scattering coefficients at 550 nm were
similar (∼120 Mm−1), as too were CO near-surface
concentrations (310–340 ppb). We attribute these contrasts to the more
flaming combustion of Cerrado fires in the east and more smouldering
combustion of deforestation and pasture fires in the west. Horizontal wind
shear was important in inhibiting mixed layer growth and plume rise, in
addition to advecting pollutants from the Cerrado regions into the remote
tropical forest of central Amazonia. Thin layers above the mixing layer
indicate the roles of both plume injection and shallow moist convection in
delivering pollution to the lower free troposphere. However, detrainment of
large smoke plumes into the upper free troposphere was very infrequently
observed. Our results reiterate that thermodynamics control the pollutant
vertical distribution and thus point to the need for correct model
representation so that the spatial distribution and vertical structure of biomass
burning smoke is captured. We observed an increase of aerosol abundance relative to CO with altitude
both in the background haze and plume enhancement ratios. It is unlikely
associated with thermodynamic partitioning, aerosol deposition or local
non-fire sources. We speculate it may be linked to long-range transport from
West Africa or fire combustion efficiency coupled to plume injection height.
Further enquiry is required to explain the phenomenon and explore impacts on
regional climate and air quality.
Funder
Natural Environment Research Council
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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