Combined analyses of hygroscopic properties of organic and inorganic components of three representative black carbon samples recovered from pyrolysis

2021 ◽  
Vol 771 ◽  
pp. 145393
Author(s):  
Minli Wang ◽  
Yiqun Chen ◽  
Heyun Fu ◽  
Xiaolei Qu ◽  
Guofeng Shen ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Minli Wang ◽  
Yiqun Chen ◽  
Heyun Fu ◽  
Xiaolei Qu ◽  
Bengang Li ◽  
...  

Abstract. The hygroscopic behavior of black carbon (BC) has a significant impact on global and regional climate change. However, the mechanism and factors controlling the hygroscopicity of BC from different carbon sources are not well understood. Here, we systematically measured the equilibrium and kinetics of water uptake by 15 different BC (10 herb-derived BC, 2 wood-derived BC, and 3 soot) using gravimetric water vapor sorption method combined with in-situ diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy (DRIFTS). In the gravimetric analysis, the sorption/desorption equilibrium isotherms were measured under continuous-stepwise water vapor pressure conditions, while the kinetics was measured at a variety of humidity levels obtained by different saturated aqueous salt solutions. The equilibrium water uptake of the BC pool at high relative humidity (> 80 %) positively correlated to the dissolved mineral content (0.01–13.0 wt %) (R2 = 0.86, P = 0.0001) as well as the content of the thermogravimetrically analyzed organic carbon (OCTGA, 4.48–15.25 wt %) (R2 = 0.52, P = 0.002) and the alkali-extracted organic carbon (OCAE, 0.14–8.39 wt %) (R2 = 0.80, P = 0.0001). In contrast, no positive correlation was obtained with the content of total organic carbon or elemental carbon. Among the major soluble ionic constituents, chloride and ammonium were each correlated with the equilibrium water uptake at high relative humidity. Compared with the herbal BC and soot, the woody BC had much lower equilibrium water uptake, especially at high relative humidity, likely due to the very low dissolved material content and OC content. The DRIFTS analysis provided generally consistent results at low relative humidity. The kinetics of water uptake (measured by pseudo-second order rate constant) correlated to the content of OCTGA and OCAE as well as the content of chloride and ammonium at low relative humidity (33 %), but to the porosity of bulk BC at high relative humidity (94 %). This was the first study to show that BC of different types and sources has greatly varying hygroscopic properties.


2005 ◽  
Vol 5 (8) ◽  
pp. 2203-2226 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Van Dingenen ◽  
J.-P. Putaud ◽  
S. Martins-Dos Santos ◽  
F. Raes

Abstract. Aerosol physical properties were measured at the Monte Cimone Observatory (Italy) from 1 June till 6 July 2000. The measurement site is located in the transition zone between the continental boundary layer and the free troposphere (FT), at the border between the Mediterranean area and Central Europe, and is exposed to a variety of air masses. Sub-μm number size distributions, aerosol hygroscopicity near 90% RH, refractory size distribution at 270°C and equivalent black carbon mass were continuously measured. Number size distributions and hygroscopic properties indicate that the site is exposed to aged continental air masses, however during daytime it is also affected by upslope winds. The mixing of this transported polluted boundary layer air masses with relatively clean FT air leads to frequent nucleation events around local noon. Night-time size distributions, including fine and coarse fractions for each air mass episode, have been parameterized by a 3-modal lognormal distribution. Number and volume concentrations in the sub-μm modes are strongly affected by the air mass origin, with highest levels in NW-European air masses, versus very clean, free tropospheric air coming from the N-European sector. During a brief but distinct dust episode, the coarse mode is clearly enhanced. The observed hygroscopic behavior of the aerosol is consistent with the chemical composition described by Putaud et al. (2004), but no closure between known chemical composition and measured hygroscopicity could be made because the hygroscopic properties of the water-soluble organic matter (WSOM) are not known. The data suggest that WSOM is slightly-to-moderately hygroscopic (hygroscopic growth factor GF at 90% relative humidity between 1.05 and 1.51), and that this property may well depend on the air mass origin and history. External mixing of aerosol particles is observed in all air masses through the occurrence of two hygroscopicity modes (average GF of 1.22 and 1.37, respectively). However, the presence of "less" hygroscopic particles has mostly such a low occurrence rate that the average growth factor distribution for each air mass sector actually appears as a single mode. This is not the case for the dust episode, where the external mixing between less hygroscopic and more hygroscopic particles is very prominent, and indicating clearly the occurrence of a dust accumulation mode, extending down to 50 nm particles, along with an anthropogenic pollution mode. The presented physical measurements finally allow us to provide a partitioning of the sub-μm aerosol in four non-overlapping fractions (soluble/volatile, non-soluble/volatile, refractory/non-black carbon, black carbon) which can be associated with separate groups of chemical compounds determined with chemical-analytical techniques (ions, non-water soluble organic matter, dust, elemental carbon). All air masses except the free-tropospheric N-European and Dust episodes show a similar composition within the uncertainty of the data (53%, 37%, 5% and 5% respectively for the four defined fractions). Compared to these sectors, the dust episode shows a clearly enhanced refractory-non-BC fraction (17%), attributed to dust in the accumulation mode, whereas for the very clean N-EUR sector, the total refractory fraction is 25%, of which 13% non-BC and 12% BC.


2011 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 917-950 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. R. McMeeking ◽  
N. Good ◽  
M. D. Petters ◽  
G. McFiggans ◽  
H. Coe

Abstract. Black carbon (BC) is a short term climate forcer that directly warms the atmosphere, slows convection, and hinders quantification of the effect of greenhouse gases on climate change. The atmospheric lifetime of BC particles with respect to nucleation scavenging in clouds is controlled by their ability to serve as cloud condensation nuclei (CCN). To serve as CCN under typical conditions hydrophobic BC particles must acquire hygroscopic coatings. However, the quantitative relationship between coatings and hygroscopic properties for ambient BC particles is not known nor is the time scale for hydrophobic-to-hydrophilic conversion. Here we introduce a method for measuring the hygroscopicity of externally and internally mixed BC particles by coupling a single particle soot photometer with a humidified tandem differential mobility analyzer. We test this technique using uncoated and coated laboratory generated model BC compounds and apply it to characterize the hygroscopicity distribution of ambient BC particles. From these data we derive that the observed number fraction of BC that is CCN active at 0.2% supersaturation is generally low in an urban area near sources and that it varies with the trajectory of the airmass. We anticipate that our method can be combined with measures of air parcel physical and photochemical age to provide the first quantitative estimates for characterizing hydrophobic-to-hydrophilic conversion rates in the atmosphere.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 681-694
Author(s):  
Shuo Ding ◽  
Dantong Liu ◽  
Kang Hu ◽  
Delong Zhao ◽  
Ping Tian ◽  
...  

Abstract. Aerosols at the top of the planetary boundary layer (PBL) could modify its atmospheric dynamics by redistributing the solar radiation and start to be activated to form low-level cloud at this layer. Black carbon (BC), as an aerosol component efficiently absorbing solar radiation, can introduce heating and positive radiative effects at this sensitive layer, especially in the polluted PBL over the continent. This study presents continuous measurements of detailed BC properties at a mountain site located at the top of the polluted PBL over the North China Plain, during seasons (3 and 4 weeks of data during winter and summer, respectively) with contrasting emission structure and meteorology. The pollution level was persistently influenced by local surface anthropogenic emission on a daily basis through daytime convective mixing, but the concentration was also enhanced or diluted depending on air mass direction, defined as a neutral, polluted and diluted PBL, respectively. Winter was observed to have a higher BC mass fraction (4 %–8 %) than summer (2 %–7 %). By resolving the detailed particle size-resolved mixing state of BC in optical and hygroscopic models, we found an enhanced BC mass absorption cross section (MACBC) for the polluted PBL (up to 13 m2 g−1 at λ = 550 nm), which was 5 % higher during summer than winter due to a smaller BC core size. The higher BC mass fraction in winter corresponded to a lower single-scattering albedo by 0.03–0.09 than summer, especially the lowest for the diluted winter PBL (0.86 ± 0.02). The water supersaturation (SS) required to activate half the number of BC decreased from 0.21 % ± 0.08 % to 0.1 % ± 0.03 % for the winter diluted and polluted PBL and from 0.22 % ± 0.06 % to 0.17 % ± 0.05 % for summer. Notably, at the top of the anthropogenically polluted PBL in both seasons, the enlarged BC with enhanced absorption capacity could also be efficiently droplet activated; e.g. winter (summer) BC with an MAC of 9.84 ± 1.2 (10.7 ± 1) m2 g−1 could be half activated at SS = 0.13 % ± 0.06 % (0.18 % ± 0.05 %). This BC at the top of the PBL can more directly interact with the free troposphere and be transported to a wider region, exerting important direct and indirect radiative impacts.


2011 ◽  
Vol 11 (10) ◽  
pp. 5099-5112 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. R. McMeeking ◽  
N. Good ◽  
M. D. Petters ◽  
G. McFiggans ◽  
H. Coe

Abstract. Black carbon (BC) is a short term climate forcer that directly warms the atmosphere, slows convection, and hinders quantification of the effect of greenhouse gases on climate change. The atmospheric lifetime of BC particles with respect to nucleation scavenging in clouds is controlled by their ability to serve as cloud condensation nuclei (CCN). To serve as CCN under typical conditions, hydrophobic BC particles must acquire hygroscopic coatings. However, the quantitative relationship between coatings and hygroscopic properties for ambient BC particles is not known nor is the time scale for hydrophobic-to-hydrophilic conversion. Here we introduce a method for measuring the hygroscopicity of externally and internally mixed BC particles by coupling a single particle soot photometer with a humidified tandem differential mobility analyzer. We test this technique using uncoated and coated laboratory generated model BC compounds and apply it to characterize the hygroscopicity distribution of ambient BC particles. From these data we derive that the observed number fraction of BC that is CCN active at 0.2 % supersaturation is generally low in an urban area near sources and that it varies with the trajectory of the airmass. We anticipate that our method can be combined with measures of air parcel physical and photochemical age to provide the first quantitative estimates for characterizing hydrophobic-to-hydrophilic conversion rates in the atmosphere.


2012 ◽  
Vol 12 (11) ◽  
pp. 28955-28992 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Liu ◽  
J. Allan ◽  
J. Whitehead ◽  
D. Young ◽  
M. Flynn ◽  
...  

Abstract. The wet removal of black carbon aerosol (BC) in the atmosphere is a crucial factor in determining its atmospheric lifetime and thereby the vertical and horizontal distributions, dispersion on local and regional scales, and the direct, semi-direct and indirect radiative forcing effects. The in-cloud scavenging and wet deposition rate of freshly emitted hydrophobic BC will be increased on acquisition of more-hydrophilic components by coagulation or coating processes. The lifetime of BC is still subject to considerable uncertainty for most of the model inputs, which is largely due to the insufficient constraints on the BC hydrophobic-to-hydrophilic conversion process from observational field data. This study was conducted at a site along UK North Norfolk coastline, where the BC particles were transported from different regions within Western Europe. A hygroscopicity tandem differential mobility analyser (HTDMA) was coupled with a single particle soot photometer (SP2) to measure the hygroscopic properties of BC particles and associated mixing state in real time. In addition, a Soot Particle AMS (SP-AMS) measured the chemical compositions of additional material associated with BC particles. The ensemble of BC particles persistently contained a less-hygroscopic mode at a growth factor (gf) of around 1.05 at 90% RH (dry diameter 163 nm). Importantly, a more-hygroscopic mode of BC particles was observed throughout the experiment, the gf of these BC particles extended up to ~1.4–1.6 with the minimum between this and the less hygroscopic mode at a gf ~1.25, or equivalent effective hygroscopicity parameter κ = ~0.1. The gf of BC particles (gfBC) was highly influenced by the composition of associated soluble material: increases of gfBC were associated with secondary inorganic components, and these increases were more pronounced when ammonium nitrate was in the BC particles; however the presence of secondary organic matter suppressed the gfBC below that of pure inorganics. The Zdanovskii-Stokes-Robinson (ZSR) mixing rule captures the hygroscopicity contributions from different compositions within ±30% compared to the measured results, however is subject to uncertainty due to the complex morphology of BC component and potential artefacts associated with semivolatile particles measured with the HTDMA. This study provides detailed insights on BC hygroscopicity associated with its mixing state, and the results will importantly constrain the microphysical mixing schemes of BC as used by a variety of high level models. In particular, this provides direct evidence to highlight the need to consider ammonium nitrate ageing of BC particles because this will result in particles becoming hydrophilic on much shorter timescales than for sulphate formation, which is often the only mechanism considered.


2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (13) ◽  
pp. 7941-7954
Author(s):  
Minli Wang ◽  
Yiqun Chen ◽  
Heyun Fu ◽  
Xiaolei Qu ◽  
Bengang Li ◽  
...  

Abstract. The hygroscopic behavior of black carbon (BC)-containing particles (BCPs) has a significant impact on global and regional climate change. However, the mechanism and factors controlling the hygroscopicity of BCPs from different carbon sources are not well understood. Here, we systematically measured the equilibrium and kinetics of water uptake by 15 different BCPs (10 herb-derived BCPs, 2 wood-derived BCPs, and 3 soot-type BCPs) using a gravimetric water vapor sorption method combined with in situ diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy (DRIFTS). In the gravimetric analysis, the sorption–desorption equilibrium isotherms were measured under continuous-stepwise water vapor pressure conditions, while the kinetics was measured at a variety of humidity levels obtained by different saturated aqueous salt solutions. The equilibrium water uptake of the tested group of BCPs at high relative humidity (>80 %) positively correlated to the dissolved mineral content (0.01–13.0 wt %) (R2=0.86, P=0.0001), the content of the thermogravimetrically analyzed organic carbon (OCTGA, 4.48–15.25 wt %) (R2=0.52, P=0.002), and the content of the alkali-extracted organic carbon (OCAE, 0.14–8.39 wt %) (R2=0.80, P=0.0001). In contrast, no positive correlation was obtained with the content of total organic carbon or elemental carbon. Among the major soluble ionic constituents, chloride and ammonium were each correlated with the equilibrium water uptake at high relative humidity. Compared with the herbal BCPs and soot, the woody BCPs had much lower equilibrium water uptake, especially at high relative humidity, likely due to the very low dissolved mineral content and OC content. The DRIFTS analysis provided generally consistent results at low relative humidity. The kinetics of water uptake (measured by pseudo-second-order rate constant) correlated to the content of OCTGA and OCAE as well as the content of chloride and ammonium at low relative humidity (33 %) but to the porosity of BCPs at high relative humidity (94 %). This was the first study to show that BCPs of different types and sources had greatly varying hygroscopic properties.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ghislain Motos ◽  
Julia Schmale ◽  
Joel Christopher Corbin ◽  
Marco Zanatta ◽  
Urs Baltensperger ◽  
...  

Abstract. Among the variety of particle types present in the atmosphere, black carbon (BC), emitted by combustion processes, is uniquely associated with harmful effects to the human body and substantial radiative forcing of the Earth. Pure BC is known to be non-hygroscopic, but its ability to acquire a coating of hygroscopic organic and inorganic material leads to increased hygroscopicity as well as diameter, facilitating droplet activation. This affects BC radiative forcing through aerosol-cloud interactions (aci) and BC life cycle. To gain insights into these processes, we performed a field campaign in winter 2015/16 in a residential area of Zurich which aimed at distinguishing different particle mixing states regarding hygroscopic properties in the cloud condensation nuclei (CCN)-activated fraction spectrum of urban aerosol and establishing relations between the mixing state of BC and its activation to form droplets in fog. This was achieved by operating a CCN counter (CCNC), a scanning mobility particle sizer (SMPS), a single particle soot photometer (SP2) and an aerosol chemical speciation monitor (ACSM) behind a combination of a total- and an interstitial-aerosol inlet. Our results indicate that, depending on the time of the day, we sampled both heavily aged internally mixed BC from background air advected to the site and freshly emitted externally mixed BC from local or regional traffic sources. During rush hours in the morning of weekdays, we found clear evidence that the enhanced traffic emissions caused peaks in the number fraction of externally mixed BC particles which do not act as CCN within the CCNC. The mixing state of BC particles was also found to play a key role in their ability to form fog droplets. The very low effective peak supersaturations (SSpeak) occurring in fog (between approximately 0.03 and 0.06 % during this campaign) restrict droplet activation to a minor fraction of the aerosol burden (around 0.5 to 1 % of total particle number concentration between 20 and 593 nm) leading to very selective criteria on diameter and chemical composition. We show that bare BC cores are unable to activate to fog droplets at such low SSpeak, while BC particles surrounded by thick coating have a very similar activation behavior as BC-free particles. The threshold coating thickness required for activation was shown to decrease with increasing BC core size. Using simplified κ-Köhler theory combined with the ZSR mixing rule assuming spherical core-shell particle geometry constrained with single particle measurements of respective volumes, we found good agreement between the predicted and the directly observed size and mixing state resolved droplet activation behaviour of BC-containing particles in fog. This successful closure demonstrates the predictability of their droplet activation in fog with a simplified theoretical model only requiring size and mixing state information, which can also be applied in a consistent manner in model simulations.


2004 ◽  
Vol 4 (11/12) ◽  
pp. 2521-2541 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Hendricks ◽  
B. Kärcher ◽  
A. Döpelheuer ◽  
J. Feichter ◽  
U. Lohmann ◽  
...  

Abstract. The black carbon (BC) burden of the upper troposphere and lowermost stratosphere (UTLS) is investigated with the general circulation model (GCM) ECHAM4. The special focus is the contribution of aircraft emissions to the UTLS BC loading. Previous studies on the role of aircraft emissions in the global BC cycle either neglect BC sources located at the Earth's surface or simplify the BC cycle by assuming pre-defined BC residence times. Here, the global BC cycle including emissions, transport, and removal is explicitly simulated. The BC emissions considered include surface sources as well as BC from aviation. This enables a consistent calculation of the relative contribution of aviation to the global atmospheric BC cycle. As a further extension to the previous studies, the aviation-induced perturbation of the UTLS BC particle number concentration is investigated. The uncertainties associated with the model predictions are evaluated by means of several sensitivity studies. Especially, the sensitivity of the results to different assumptions on the BC hygroscopic properties is analysed. The simulated UTLS BC concentrations are compared to in-situ observations. The simulations suggest that the large-scale contribution of aviation to the UTLS BC mass budget typically amounts to only a few percent, even in the most frequented flight regions. The aviation impact far away from these regions is negligible. The simulated aircraft contributions to the UTLS BC particle number concentration are much larger compared to the corresponding mass perturbations. The simulations suggest that aviation can cause large-scale increases in the UTLS BC particle number concentration of more than 30% in regions highly frequented by aircraft. The relative effect shows a pronounced annual variation with the largest relative aviation impact occurring during winter.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document