Model estimation of the lidar ratio of submicron aerosol containing black carbon

2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Svetlana A. Terpugova ◽  
Mikhail V. Panchenko ◽  
Valerii S. Kozlov
Author(s):  
James Brooks ◽  
James D. Allan ◽  
Paul I. Williams ◽  
Dantong Liu ◽  
Cathryn Fox ◽  
...  

<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> The vertical distribution in the physical and chemical properties of submicron aerosol has been characterised across northern India for the first time using airborne in-situ measurements. This study focusses primarily on the Indo-Gangetic Plain, a low-lying area in the north of India which commonly experiences high aerosol mass concentrations prior to the monsoon season. Data presented are from the UK Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements BAe-146 research aircraft that performed flights in the region during the 2016 pre-monsoon (11<sup>th</sup> and 12<sup>th</sup> June) and monsoon (30<sup>th</sup> June to 11<sup>th</sup> July) seasons.</p> <p> Inside the Indo-Gangetic Plain boundary layer, organic matter dominated the submicron aerosol mass (43&amp;thinsp;%) followed by sulphate (29&amp;thinsp;%), ammonium (14&amp;thinsp;%), nitrate (7&amp;thinsp;%) and black carbon (7&amp;thinsp;%). However, outside the Indo-Gangetic Plain, sulphate was the dominant species contributing 44&amp;thinsp;% to the total submicron aerosol mass in the boundary layer, followed by organic matter (30&amp;thinsp;%), ammonium (14&amp;thinsp;%), nitrate (6&amp;thinsp;%) and black carbon (6&amp;thinsp;%). Chlorine mass concentrations were negligible throughout the campaign. Black carbon mass concentrations were higher inside the Indo-Gangetic Plain (2&amp;thinsp;µg/m<sup>3</sup> std) compared to outside (1&amp;thinsp;µg/m<sup>3</sup> std). Nitrate appeared to be controlled by thermodynamic processes, with increased mass concentration in conditions of lower temperature and higher relative humidity. Increased mass and number concentrations were observed inside the Indo-Gangetic Plain and the aerosol was more absorbing in this region, whereas outside the Indo-Gangetic Plain the aerosol was larger in size and more scattering in nature, suggesting greater dust presence especially in northwest India. The aerosol composition remained largely similar as the monsoon season progressed, but the total aerosol mass concentrations decreased by ~&amp;thinsp;50&amp;thinsp;% as the rainfall arrived; the pre-monsoon average total mass concentration was 30&amp;thinsp;µg/m<sup>3</sup> std compared to a monsoon average total mass concentration of 10&amp;ndash;20&amp;thinsp;µg/m<sup>3</sup> std. However, this mass concentration decrease was less noteworthy (~&amp;thinsp;20&amp;ndash;30&amp;thinsp;%) over the Indo-Gangetic Plain, likely due to the strength of emission sources in this region. Decreases occurred in coarse mode aerosol, with the fine mode fraction increasing with monsoon arrival. In the aerosol vertical profile, inside the Indo-Gangetic Plain during the pre-monsoon, organic aerosol and absorbing aerosol species dominated in the lower atmosphere (<&amp;thinsp;1.5&amp;thinsp;km) with sulphate, dust and other scattering aerosol species enhanced in an elevated aerosol layer above 1.5&amp;thinsp;km with maximum aerosol height ~&amp;thinsp;6&amp;thinsp;km. As the monsoon progressed into this region, the elevated aerosol layer diminished, the aerosol maximum height reduced to ~&amp;thinsp;2&amp;thinsp;km and the total mass concentrations decreased by ~&amp;thinsp;50&amp;thinsp;%. The dust and sulphate-dominated aerosol layer aloft was removed upon monsoon arrival, highlighted by an increase in fine mode fraction throughout the profile.</p>


2013 ◽  
Vol 13 (7) ◽  
pp. 3603-3618 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.-M. Diesch ◽  
F. Drewnick ◽  
T. Klimach ◽  
S. Borrmann

Abstract. Measurements of the ambient aerosol, various trace gases and meteorological quantities using a mobile laboratory (MoLa) were performed on the banks of the Lower Elbe in an emission control area (ECA) which is passed by numerous private and commercial marine vessels reaching and leaving the port of Hamburg, Germany. From 25–29 April 2011 a total of 178 vessels were probed at a distance of about 0.8–1.2 km with high temporal resolution. 139 ship emission plumes were of sufficient quality to be analyzed further and to determine emission factors (EFs). Concentrations of aerosol number and mass as well as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) and black carbon were measured in PM1 and size distribution instruments covered the diameter range from 6 nm up to 32 μm. The chemical composition of the non-refractory submicron aerosol was measured by means of an Aerosol Mass Spectrometer (Aerodyne HR-ToF-AMS). Gas phase species analyzers monitored various trace gases (O3, SO2, NO, NO2, CO2) in the air and a weather station provided wind, precipitation, solar radiation data and other quantities. Together with ship information for each vessel obtained from Automatic Identification System (AIS) broadcasts a detailed characterization of the individual ship types and of features affecting gas and particulate emissions is provided. Particle number EFs (average 2.6e+16 # kg−1) and PM1 mass EFs (average 2.4 g kg−1) tend to increase with the fuel sulfur content. Observed PM1 composition of the vessel emissions was dominated by organic matter (72%), sulfate (22%) and black carbon (6%) while PAHs only account for 0.2% of the submicron aerosol mass. Measurements of gaseous components showed an increase of SO2 (average EF: 7.7 g kg−1) and NOx (average EF: 53 g kg−1) while O3 decreased when a ship plume reached the sampling site. The particle number size distributions of the vessels are generally characterized by a bimodal size distribution, with the nucleation mode in the 10–20 nm diameter range and a combustion aerosol mode centered at about 35 nm while particles \\textgreater 1 μm were not found. "High particle number emitters" are characterized by a dominant nucleation mode. By contrast, increased particle concentrations around 150 nm primarily occurred for "high black carbon emitters". Classifying the vessels according to their gross tonnage shows a decrease of the number, black carbon and PAH EFs while EFs of SO2, NO, NO2, NOx, AMS species (particulate organics, sulfate) and PM1 mass concentration increase with increasing gross tonnages.


2011 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 30-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. S. Kozlov ◽  
M. V. Panchenko ◽  
E. P. Yausheva

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongyu Guo ◽  
Pedro Campuzano-Jost ◽  
Benjamin Nault ◽  
Douglas Day ◽  
Christina Williamson ◽  
...  

&lt;p&gt;The Aerodyne Aerosol Mass Spectrometer (AMS) is a widely used instrument to quantify the composition of non-refractory submicron aerosol, in particular, organic aerosol (OA). Past comparisons, particularly of aircraft data in continental areas, have shown good overall agreement with other chemical and optical sensors. Recently, theoretically-based concerns have been raised regarding the overall AMS calibration uncertainties (particularly for OA), although there is no evidence that those apply to aircraft datasets.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The ATom mission sampled the remote marine troposphere from 87S to 82N and from 0 to 12.5 km over the course of four aircraft deployments over the space of 2 years, carrying an advanced aerosol payload that included particle sizing instruments operated by NOAA ESRL, as well as several chemical sensors: UNH Mist Chamber and Filters for inorganic aerosol, NOAA SP2 for black carbon measurements, NOAA PALMS instrument for single particle composition and the CU aircraft high-resolution AMS for non-refractory submicron mass. This provides a unique opportunity to explore the agreement of the different instruments over a very large range of conditions and calibration regimes, and improve our understanding of the various instrumental uncertainties in field data.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Special attention was paid to characterize the AMS size-dependent transmission with in-field calibrations; this provided crucial context when comparing with instruments with very different size cuts. Excellent agreement was found between the AMS calculated volume (including black carbon from the SP2) and the PM1 volume derived from the NOAA particle sizing measurements over three orders of magnitude (slope 0.94). The comparisons for sulfate, OA, and seasalt (the three main components of the remote PM1 aerosol) measured by AMS with the PALMS instrument showed similar consistency once differences in particle detection at different sizes were accounted for. Similarly, comparisons with sulfate from filters showed good consistency once episodes with large supermicron mass were filtered out. Comparisons of the AMS with the mist chamber sulfate were affected by the variable time response of the latter instrument but were overall consistent. Overall, no evidence for AMS calibration artifacts or unknown sources of error was found for these datasets. A comprehensive evaluation of the different sources of uncertainty and their impact on the comparisons was performed, and factors to be considered for performing such intercomparisons and improving the reliability of submicron mass quantification in the future are discussed.&lt;/p&gt;


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandru Mereuță ◽  
Nicolae Ajtai ◽  
Andrei Titus Radovici ◽  
Nikolaos Papagiannopoulos ◽  
Lucia Timea Deaconu ◽  
...  

Abstract. Black carbon aerosols are the second largest contributor to global warming while also being linked to respiratory and cardiovascular disease. These particles are generally found in smoke plumes originating from biomass burning and fossil fuel combustion. They are also heavily concentrated in smoke plumes originating from oil fires exhibiting the largest ratio of black carbon to organic carbon. In this study, we identified and analyzed oil smoke plumes derived from 30 major industrial events within a 12-year timeframe. To our knowledge, this is the first study of its kind that utilized a synergetic approach based on satellite remote sensing techniques. One objective of this study is to highlight the importance of satellite remote sensing techniques in identifying these types of events. As opposed to ground stations, satellite data offers access to remote areas all over the globe which would otherwise be very difficult to reach. Satellite data offers access to these events which, as seen in this study, are mainly located in war prone or hazardous areas. This study focuses on the use of MODIS (Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) and CALIPSO (Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observations) products regarding these types of aerosol while also highlighting their intrinsic limitations. By using data from both MODIS instruments onboard Terra and Aqua satellites we addressed the temporal evolution of the smoke plume while assessing Lidar specific properties and plume elevation using CALIPSO data. We present several aerosol properties in the form of plume specific averaged values. The MODIS ocean algorithms were successful in retrieving aerosol properties which, on average, ranged from −0.06 to 0.16 for plume specific AOD, −0.18 to 1.25 for Ångström exponent and 0.29 to 1.73 µm for the effective radius. CALIPSO measurements showed values of plume AOD ranging from 0 to 0.14 (532 nm) and 0 to 0.13 (1064 nm) except for one event where AOD values showed 1.52 (532 nm) and 1.42 (1064 nm). AE values ranged from 0.11 to 0.33 which were in agreeance with MODIS values. A large discrepancy can be found in one event where CALIPSO measured AOD values 5 times higher than MODIS. This event also produced the largest lidar ratio at 109 sr (532 nm) and 86 (1064 nm). Other lidar ratio values ranged from 37 to 55 sr however these unconstrained solutions were obtained for the entire layer of which the plumes were a part of and thus did not reflect specific plume conditions. Particulate backscatter values ranged from 0.002 to 0.0017 km−1 sr−1 while extinction coefficient values ranged from 0.10 to 1.65 km−1. On average backscatter and extinction coefficient values were 2 to 9 times higher than local background values. Particulate depolarization ratios ranged from 0.11 to 0.15 in 4 out of 6 cases while the remaining two ranged from 0.27 to 0.32 where dust was highly dominant. The values represented in this study are in good agreement with similar studies that used ground based and flight measurements. We believe that MODIS values are a conservative estimation of plume AOD since MODIS algorithms rely on general aerosol models and various atmospheric conditions within the look-up tables which do not reflect the highly absorbing nature of these smoke plumes. CALIPSO measurements are heavily dependent on lidar ratios which are not directly measured if plumes within the planetary boundary layer. We also believe that AOD values based on CALIPSO measurements are conservative in nature since heavy absorbing smoke would yield larger lidar ratios and AOD values. Based on this study we conclude that the MODIS land algorithms are not yet suited for retrieving aerosol properties for these types of smoke plumes due to the strong absorbing properties of these aerosols. We believe that these types of studies are a strong indicator for the need of improved aerosol models and retrieval algorithms.


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