Light absorption by polar and non-polar aerosol compounds from laboratory biomass combustion
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Published:2018-08-03
Issue:15
Volume:18
Page:10849-10867
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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:
Sengupta Deep, Samburova Vera, Bhattarai ChiranjiviORCID, Kirillova Elena, Mazzoleni LynnORCID, Iaukea-Lum Michealene, Watts Adam, Moosmüller HansORCID, Khlystov AndreyORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Fresh and atmospherically aged
biomass-burning (BB) aerosol mass is mostly comprised of strongly
light-absorbing black carbon (BC) and of organic carbon (OC) with its
light-absorbing fraction – brown carbon (BrC). There is a lack of data on
the physical and chemical properties of atmospheric BB aerosols, leading to
high uncertainties in estimates of the BB impact on air quality and climate,
especially for BrC. The polarity of chemical compounds influences their fate
in the atmosphere including wet/dry deposition and chemical and physical
processing. So far, most of the attention has been given to the water-soluble
(polar) fraction of BrC, while the non-polar BrC fraction has been largely
ignored. In the present study, the light absorption properties of polar and
non-polar fractions of fresh and aged BB emissions were examined to estimate
the contribution of different-polarity organic compounds to the light
absorption properties of BB aerosols. In our experiments, four globally and regionally important fuels were burned
under flaming and smoldering conditions in the Desert Research Institute
(DRI)
combustion chamber. To mimic atmospheric oxidation processes (5–7 days), BB
emissions were aged using an oxidation flow reactor (OFR). Fresh and OFR-aged
BB aerosols were collected on filters and extracted with water and hexane to
study absorption properties of polar and non-polar organic species. Results
of spectrophotometric measurements (absorption weighted by the solar spectrum
and normalized to mass of fuel consumed) over the 190 to 900 nm wavelength
range showed that the non-polar (hexane-soluble) fraction is 2–3 times more
absorbing than the polar (water-soluble) fraction. However, for emissions
from fuels that undergo flaming combustion, an increased absorbance was
observed for the water extracts of oxidized/aged emissions while the
absorption of the hexane extracts was lower for the aged emissions for the
same type of fuels. Absorption Ångström exponent (AAE) values,
computed based on absorbance values from spectrophotometer measurements, were
changed with aging and the nature of this change was fuel dependent. The
light absorption by humic-like substances (HULIS) was found to be higher in fuels characteristic of the
southwestern USA. The absorption of the HULIS fraction was lower for OFR-aged
BB emissions. Comparison of the light absorption properties of
different-polarity extracts (water, hexane, HULIS) provides insight into the
chemical nature of BB BrC and its transformation during oxidation processes.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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