scholarly journals Estimation of the mass absorption cross section of the organic carbon component of aerosols in the Mexico City Metropolitan Area (MCMA)

2008 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 10189-10225 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. C. Barnard ◽  
R. Volkamer ◽  
E. I. Kassianov

Abstract. Data taken from the MCMA-2003 and the 2006 MILAGRO field campaigns are used to examine the absorption of solar radiation by the organic component of aerosols. Using irradiance data from a Multi-Filter Rotating Shadowband Radiometer (MFRSR) and an actinic flux spectroradiometer (SR), we derive aerosol single scattering albedo, π0,λ, as a function of wavelength, λ. We find that in the near-UV spectral range (250 to 400 nm) π0,λ is much lower compared to π0,λ at 500 nm indicating enhanced absorption in the near-UV range. Absorption by elemental carbon, dust, or gas cannot account for this enhanced absorption leaving the organic part of the aerosol as the only possible absorber. We use data from a surface deployed Aerodyne Aerosol Mass Spectrometer (AMS) along with the inferred π0,λ to estimate the Mass Absorption Cross section (MAC) for the organic carbon. We find that the MAC is about 10.5 m2/g at 300 nm and falls close to zero at about 500 nm; values that are roughly consistent with other estimates of organic carbon MAC. These MAC values can be considered as "radiatively correct" because when used in radiative transfer calculations the calculated irradiances/actinic fluxes match those measured at the wavelengths considered here. For an illustrative case study described here, we estimate that the light absorption by the "brown" (organic) carbonaceous aerosol can add about 40% to the light absorption of black carbon in Mexico City. This contribution will vary depending on the relative abundance of organic carbon relative to black carbon. Furthermore, our analysis indicates that organic aerosol would slow down photochemistry by selectively scavenging the light reaching the ground at those wavelengths that drive photochemical reactions. Finally, satellite retrievals of trace gases that are used to infer emissions currently assume that the MAC of organic carbon is zero. For trace gases that are retrieved using wavelengths shorter then 420 nm (i.e. SO2, HCHO, halogenoxides, NO2), the assumption of non-zero MAC values will induce an upward correction to the inferred emissions. This will be particularly relevant in polluted urban atmospheres and areas of biomass burning where organic aerosols are particularly abundant.

2008 ◽  
Vol 8 (22) ◽  
pp. 6665-6679 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. C. Barnard ◽  
R. Volkamer ◽  
E. I. Kassianov

Abstract. Data taken from the MCMA-2003 and the 2006 MILAGRO field campaigns are used to examine the absorption of solar radiation by the organic component of aerosols. Using irradiance data from a Multi-Filter Rotating Shadowband Radiometer (MFRSR) and an actinic flux spectroradiometer (SR), we derive aerosol single scattering albedo, ϖ0, λ, as a function of wavelength, λ. We find that in the near-UV spectral range (250 to 400 nm) ϖ0, λ is much lower compared to ϖ0, λ at 500 nm indicating enhanced absorption in the near-UV range. Absorption by elemental carbon, dust, or gas cannot account for this enhanced absorption leaving the organic carbon component of the aerosol (OA) as the most likely absorber. We use data from a surface deployed Aerodyne Aerosol Mass Spectrometer (AMS) along with the inferred ϖ0, λ to estimate the Mass Absorption Cross section (MAC) for the organic aerosol. We find that the MAC is about 10.5 m2/g at 300 nm and falls close to zero at about 500 nm; values that are roughly consistent with other estimates of organic aerosol MAC. These MAC values can be considered as "radiatively correct", because when used in radiative transfer calculations, the calculated irradiances/actinic fluxes match those measured at the wavelengths considered here. For an illustrative case study described here, we estimate that the light absorption by the "brown" (organic) carbonaceous aerosol can add about 40% to the light absorption of black carbon in Mexico City. This contribution will vary depending on the relative abundance of organic aerosol relative to black carbon. Furthermore, our analysis indicates that organic aerosol would slow down photochemistry by selectively scavenging the light reaching the ground at those wavelengths that drive photochemical reactions. Finally, satellite retrievals of trace gases that are used to infer emissions currently assume that the MAC of organic carbon is zero. For trace gases that are retrieved using wavelengths shorter then 420 nm (i.e. SO2, HCHO, halogenoxides, NO2), the assumption of non-zero MAC values will induce an upward correction to the inferred emissions. This assumption will be particularly relevant in polluted urban atmospheres and areas of biomass burning where organic aerosols are particularly abundant.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 1319-1331
Author(s):  
Weilun Zhao ◽  
Wangshu Tan ◽  
Gang Zhao ◽  
Chuanyang Shen ◽  
Yingli Yu ◽  
...  

Abstract. Atmospheric black carbon (BC) is the strongest solar radiative absorber in the atmosphere, exerting significant influences on the earth's radiation budget. The mass absorption cross section (MAC) is a crucial parameter for converting the light absorption coefficient (σab) to the equivalent BC mass concentration (EBC). Traditional filter-based instruments, such as the AE33, use a constant MAC of 7.77 m2/g at 880 nm to derive the EBC, which may lead to uncertainty in the EBC. In this paper, a new method of converting σab to the EBC is proposed by incorporating the variations of the MAC attributed to the influences of the aerosol coating state. A Mie simulation showed that the MAC varied dramatically with different core sizes and shell thicknesses. We compared our new method with the traditional method during a field measurement at a site on the North China Plain. The results showed that the MAC at 880 nm was smaller (larger) than 7.77 m2/g for particles smaller (larger) than 280 nm, resulting in an EBC mass size distribution derived from the new method that was higher (lower) than the traditional method for particles smaller (larger) than 280 nm. The size-integrated EBC derived from the new method was 16 % higher than that derived from the traditional method. Sensitivity analysis indicated that the uncertainty in the EBC caused by the refractive index (RI) was within 35 %, and the imaginary part of the RI had dominant influence on the derived EBC. This study emphasizes the necessity to take variations of the MAC into account when deriving the EBC from σab and can help constrain the uncertainty in EBC measurements.


2010 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 219-237 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Subramanian ◽  
G. L. Kok ◽  
D. Baumgardner ◽  
A. Clarke ◽  
Y. Shinozuka ◽  
...  

Abstract. A single particle soot photometer (SP2) was operated on the NCAR C-130 during the MIRAGE campaign (part of MILAGRO), sampling black carbon (BC) over Mexico. The highest BC concentrations were measured over Mexico City (sometimes as much as 2 μg/m3) and over hill-fires to the south of the city. The age of plumes outside of Mexico City was determined using a combination of HYSPLIT trajectories, WRF-FLEXPART modeling and CMET balloon tracks. As expected, older, diluted air masses had lower BC concentrations. A comparison of carbon monoxide (CO) and BC suggests a CO background of around 65 ppbv, and a background-corrected BC/COnet ratio of 2.89±0.89 (ng/m3-STP)/ppbv (average ± standard deviation). This ratio is similar for fresh emissions over Mexico City, as well as for aged airmasses. Comparison of light absorption measured with a particle soot absorption photometer (PSAP) and the SP2 BC suggests a BC mass-normalized absorption cross-section (MAC) of 10.9±2.1 m2/g at 660 nm (or 13.1 m2/g @ 550 nm, assuming MAC is inversely dependent on wavelength). This appears independent of aging and similar to the expected absorption cross-section for aged BC, but values, particularly in fresh emissions, could be biased high due to instrument artifacts. SP2-derived BC coating indicators show a prominent thinly-coated BC mode over the Mexico City Metropolitan Area (MCMA), while older air masses show both thinly-coated and thickly-coated BC. Some 2-day-old plumes do not show a prominent thickly-coated BC mode, possibly due to preferential wet scavenging of the likely-hydrophilic thickly-coated BC.


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