Emissions of black carbon, organic, and inorganic aerosols from biomass burning in North America and Asia in 2008
Author(s) -
Kondo Y.,
Matsui H.,
Moteki N.,
Sahu L.,
Takegawa N.,
Kajino M.,
Zhao Y.,
Cubison M. J.,
Jimenez J. L.,
Vay S.,
Diskin G. S.,
Anderson B.,
Wisthaler A.,
Mikoviny T.,
Fuelberg H. E.,
Blake D. R.,
Huey G.,
Weinheimer A. J.,
Knapp D. J.,
Brune W. H.
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2010jd015152
Subject(s) - biomass burning , environmental science , aerosol , atmospheric sciences , carbon black , aethalometer , boreal , range (aeronautics) , combustion , total organic carbon , taiga , troposphere , environmental chemistry , meteorology , chemistry , geography , materials science , forestry , geology , natural rubber , organic chemistry , composite material , archaeology
Reliable assessment of the impact of aerosols emitted from boreal forest fires on the Arctic climate necessitates improved understanding of emissions and the microphysical properties of carbonaceous (black carbon (BC) and organic aerosols (OA)) and inorganic aerosols. The size distributions of BC were measured by an SP2 based on the laser‐induced incandescence technique on board the DC‐8 aircraft during the NASA ARCTAS campaign. Aircraft sampling was made in fresh plumes strongly impacted by wildfires in North America (Canada and California) in summer 2008 and in those transported from Asia (Siberia in Russia and Kazakhstan) in spring 2008. We extracted biomass burning plumes using particle and tracer (CO, CH 3 CN, and CH 2 Cl 2 ) data. OA constituted the dominant fraction of aerosols mass in the submicron range. The large majority of the emitted particles did not contain BC. We related the combustion phase of the fire as represented by the modified combustion efficiency (MCE) to the emission ratios between BC and other species. In particular, we derived the average emission ratios of BC/CO = 2.3 ± 2.2 and 8.5 ± 5.4 ng m −3 /ppbv for BB in North America and Asia, respectively. The difference in the BC/CO emission ratios is likely due to the difference in MCE. The count median diameters and geometric standard deviations of the lognormal size distribution of BC in the BB plumes were 136–141 nm and 1.32–1.36, respectively, and depended little on MCE. These BC particles were thickly coated, with shell/core ratios of 1.3–1.6. These parameters can be used directly for improving model estimates of the impact of BB in the Arctic.
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