Potential underestimation of ambient brown carbon absorption based on the methanol extraction method and its impacts on source analysis
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Published:2022-10-24
Issue:20
Volume:22
Page:13739-13752
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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:
Xu Zhenqi, Feng WeiORCID, Wang Yicheng, Ye Haoran, Wang YuhangORCID, Liao Hong, Xie MingjieORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The methanol extraction method was widely applied to isolate organic carbon
(OC) from ambient aerosols, followed by measurements of brown carbon (BrC)
absorption. However, undissolved OC fractions will lead to underestimated
BrC absorption. In this work, water, methanol (MeOH), MeOH / dichloromethane
(MeOH / DCM, 1:1, v/v), MeOH / DCM (1:2, v/v), tetrahydrofuran (THF), and
N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) were tested for extraction efficiencies of
ambient OC, and the light absorption of individual solvent extracts was
determined. Among the five solvents and solvent mixtures, DMF dissolved the
highest fractions of ambient OC (up to ∼95 %), followed by
MeOH and MeOH / DCM mixtures (<90 %), and the DMF extracts had
significantly (p<0.05) higher light absorption than other solvent
extracts. This is because the OC fractions evaporating at higher
temperatures (>280∘) are less soluble in MeOH
(∼80 %) than in DMF (∼90 %) and contain
stronger light-absorbing chromophores. Moreover, the light absorption of DMF
and MeOH extracts of collocated aerosol samples in Nanjing showed consistent
temporal variations in winter when biomass burning dominated BrC absorption, while the average light absorption of DMF extracts was more than 2 times
greater than the MeOH extracts in late spring and summer. The average light
absorption coefficient at 365 nm of DMF extracts was 30.7 % higher (p<0.01) than that of MeOH extracts. Source apportionment results
indicated that the MeOH solubility of BrC associated with biomass burning,
lubricating oil combustion, and coal combustion is similar to their DMF
solubility. The BrC linked with unburned fossil fuels and polymerization
processes of aerosol organics was less soluble in MeOH than in DMF, which
was likely the main reason for the large difference in time series between
MeOH and DMF extract absorption. These results highlight the importance of
testing different solvents to investigate the structures and light
absorption of BrC, particularly for the low-volatility fraction potentially
originating from non-combustion sources.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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