Abstract

Abstract. Single-particle mass spectrometry (SPMS) instruments characterize the composition of individual aerosol particles in real time. Their fundamental ability to differentiate the externally mixed particle types that constitute the atmospheric aerosol population enables a unique perspective into sources and transformation. However, quantitative measurements by SPMS systems are inherently problematic. We introduce a new technique that combines collocated measurements of aerosol composition by SPMS and size-resolved absolute particle concentrations on aircraft platforms. Quantitative number, surface area, volume, and mass concentrations are derived for climate-relevant particle types such as mineral dust, sea salt, and biomass burning smoke. Additionally, relative ion signals are calibrated to derive mass concentrations of internally mixed sulfate and organic material that are distributed across multiple particle types. The NOAA Particle Analysis by Laser Mass Spectrometry (PALMS) instrument measures size-resolved aerosol chemical composition from aircraft. We describe the identification and quantification of nine major atmospheric particle classes, including sulfate–organic–nitrate mixtures, biomass burning, elemental carbon, sea salt, mineral dust, meteoric material, alkali salts, heavy fuel oil combustion, and a remainder class. Classes can be sub-divided as necessary based on chemical heterogeneity, accumulated secondary material during aging, or other atmospheric processing. Concentrations are derived for sizes that encompass the accumulation and coarse size modes. A statistical error analysis indicates that particle class concentrations can be determined within a few minutes for abundances above ∼10 ng m−3. Rare particle types require longer sampling times. We explore the instrumentation requirements and the limitations of the method for airborne measurements. Reducing the size resolution of the particle data increases time resolution with only a modest increase in uncertainty. The principal limiting factor to fast time response concentration measurements is statistically relevant sampling across the size range of interest, in particular, sizes D < 0.2 µm for accumulation-mode studies and D > 2 µm for coarse-mode analysis. Performance is compared to other airborne and ground-based composition measurements, and examples of atmospheric mineral dust concentrations are given. The wealth of information afforded by composition-resolved size distributions for all major aerosol types represents a new and powerful tool to characterize atmospheric aerosol properties in a quantitative fashion.

Highlights

  • Particle mass spectrometry is a valuable method for characterizing atmospheric aerosol composition from airborne platforms

  • Instrumental techniques can be broadly categorized into bulk methods, where all aerosol within a size range are collected and characterized as a population (Canagaratna et al, 2007; Pratt and Prather, 2012), and single-particle methods that characterize individual particles as a subset of the aerosol population, with a few hybrid methods demonstrated (Cross et al, 2009; Freutel et al, 2013)

  • We summarize the principal sampling considerations and measurement criteria for deriving particle type concentrations, and we conclude with general recommendations for implementing the method in airborne composition studies

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Particle mass spectrometry is a valuable method for characterizing atmospheric aerosol composition from airborne platforms. We present a new method that combines PALMS composition with independently measured particle size distributions to determine absolute number, surface area, volume, and mass concentrations of mineral dust, biomass burning, sea salt, and other common atmospheric particle types, with fast time response applicable to aircraft sampling where total mass concentrations are often > 100 times lower than at ground level. Estimations for principal sources of uncertainty are detailed in the Appendix

Airborne aerosol sampling
Aerosol size and composition measurements
Deriving absolute concentrations
Particle composition classes
Simplifying the size distribution
Particle densities and dynamic shape factors
Detection efficiency
Sulfate and organic mass concentrations
Comparison to other aerosol composition measurements
Examples of mineral dust mass over the US
Summary and recommendations
Size distribution
Particle classification
Density and shape factor
Statistical uncertainties in volume concentrations
Findings
Statistical analysis applied to PALMS airborne measurements
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call