Measurement report: The effect of aerosol chemical composition on light scattering due to the hygroscopic swelling effect
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Published:2021-07-02
Issue:13
Volume:21
Page:9977-9994
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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:
Ren Rongmin, Li ZhanqingORCID, Yan Peng, Wang YuyingORCID, Wu HaoORCID, Cribb Maureen, Wang WeiORCID, Jin Xiao'ai, Li Yanan, Zhang Dongmei
Abstract
Abstract. Liquid water in aerosol particles has a significant effect on
their optical properties, especially on light scattering, whose dependence
on chemical composition is investigated here using measurements made in
southern Beijing in 2019. The effect is measured by the particle light
scattering enhancement f(RH), where RH denotes the relative humidity, which
is found to be positively and negatively impacted by the proportions of
inorganic and organic matter, respectively. Black carbon is also negatively
correlated. The positive impact is more robust when the inorganic matter
mass fraction was smaller than 40 % (R=0.93, R: the Pearson's correlation
coefficient), becoming weaker as the inorganic matter mass fraction gets
larger (R=0.48). A similar pattern was also found for the negative impact
of the organic matter mass fraction. Nitrate played a more significant role
in aerosol hygroscopicity than sulfate in Beijing. However, the
deliquescence point of ambient aerosols was at about RH = 80 % when the
ratio of the sulfate mass concentration to the nitrate mass concentration of
the aerosol was high (mostly higher than ∼ 4). Two schemes to
parameterize f(RH) were developed to account for the deliquescent and
non-deliquescent effects. Using only one f(RH) parameterization scheme to fit
all f(RH) processes incurs large errors. A piecewise parameterization scheme
is proposed, which can better describe deliquescence and reduces
uncertainties in simulating aerosol hygroscopicity.
Funder
National Key Research and Development Program of China National Natural Science Foundation of China
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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