Source Quantification of South Asian Black Carbon Aerosols with Isotopes and Modeling
Author(s) -
Sanjeev Dasari,
August Andersson,
A. Stohl,
Nikolaos Evangeliou,
Srinivas Bikkina,
Henry Holmstrand,
Krishnakant Budhavant,
Abdus Salam,
Örjan Gustafsson
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
environmental science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.851
H-Index - 397
eISSN - 1520-5851
pISSN - 0013-936X
DOI - 10.1021/acs.est.0c02193
Subject(s) - environmental science , air quality index , biomass (ecology) , δ13c , atmospheric sciences , biomass burning , isotopes of carbon , physical geography , climatology , stable isotope ratio , oceanography , geography , geology , total organic carbon , meteorology , environmental chemistry , aerosol , chemistry , physics , quantum mechanics
Black carbon (BC) aerosols perturb climate and impoverish air quality/human health-affecting ∼1.5 billion people in South Asia. However, the lack of source-diagnostic observations of BC is hindering the evaluation of uncertain bottom-up emission inventories (EIs) and thereby also models/policies. Here, we present dual-isotope-based (Δ 14 C/δ 13 C) fingerprinting of wintertime BC at two receptor sites of the continental outflow. Our results show a remarkable similarity in contributions of biomass and fossil combustion, both from the site capturing the highly populated highly polluted Indo-Gangetic Plain footprint (IGP; Δ 14 C- f biomass = 50 ± 3%) and the second site in the N. Indian Ocean representing a wider South Asian footprint (52 ± 6%). Yet, both sites reflect distinct δ 13 C-fingerprints, indicating a distinguishable contribution of C 4 -biomass burning from peninsular India (PI). Tailored-model-predicted season-averaged BC concentrations (700 ± 440 ng m -3 ) match observations (740 ± 250 ng m -3 ), however, unveiling a systematically increasing model-observation bias (+19% to -53%) through winter. Inclusion of BC from open burning alone does not reconcile predictions ( f biomass = 44 ± 8%) with observations. Direct source-segregated comparison reveals regional offsets in anthropogenic emission fluxes in EIs, overestimated fossil-BC in the IGP, and underestimated biomass-BC in PI, which contributes to the model-observation bias. This ground-truthing pinpoints uncertainties in BC emission sources, which benefit both climate/air-quality modeling and mitigation policies in South Asia.
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