Vertical characterization of aerosol optical properties and brown carbon in winter in urban Beijing, China
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Published:2019-01-04
Issue:1
Volume:19
Page:165-179
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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:
Xie Conghui, Xu Weiqi, Wang JunfengORCID, Wang Qingqing, Liu DantongORCID, Tang Guiqian, Chen Ping, Du Wei, Zhao Jian, Zhang Yingjie, Zhou Wei, Han Tingting, Bian Qingyun, Li Jie, Fu PingqingORCID, Wang Zifa, Ge Xinlei, Allan JamesORCID, Coe Hugh, Sun YeleORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Aerosol particles are of importance in the Earth's radiation budget since
they scatter and absorb sunlight. While extensive studies of aerosol optical
properties have been conducted at ground sites, vertical measurements and
characterization are very limited in megacities. In this work, we present
simultaneous real-time online measurements of aerosol optical properties at
ground level and at 260 m on a meteorological tower from 16 November to
13 December in 2016 in Beijing along with measurements of continuous vertical
profiles during two haze episodes. The average (±1σ) scattering
and absorption coefficients (bsca and babs; λ=630 nm) were 337.6 (±356.0) and 36.6 (±33.9) Mm−1 at
260 m, which were 26.5 % and 22.5 % lower than those at ground
level. Single scattering albedo (SSA), however, was comparable between the
two heights, with slightly higher values at ground level (0.89±0.04).
Although bsca and babs showed overall similar
temporal variations between ground level and 260 m, the ratios of 260 m to ground
varied substantially from less than 0.4 during the clean stages of haze
episodes to > 0.8 in the late afternoon. A more detailed
analysis indicates that vertical profiles of bsca,
babs, and SSA in the low atmosphere were closely related to the
changes in meteorological conditions and mixing layer height. The mass
absorption cross section (MAC) of equivalent black carbon (eBC, λ=630 nm) varied substantially from 9.5 to 13.2 m2 g−1
in winter in Beijing, and it was strongly associated with the mass ratio of
coating materials on refractory BC (rBC) to rBC (MR), and also the
oxidation degree of organics in rBC-containing particles. Our results show
that the increases in MAC of eBC in winter were mainly caused by
photochemically produced secondary materials. Light absorption of organic
carbon (brown carbon, BrC) was also important in winter, which on average
accounted for 46 (±8.5) % and 48 (±9.3) % of the total
absorption at 370 nm at ground level and 260 m, respectively. A linear
regression model combined with positive matrix factorization analysis was
used to show that coal combustion was the dominant source contribution of BrC
(48 %–55 %) followed by biomass burning (17 %) and
photochemically processed secondary organic aerosol (∼20 %) in
winter in Beijing.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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