Abstract

Abstract. Black carbon (BC) aerosol is the strongest sunlight-absorbing aerosol, and its optical properties are fundamental to radiative forcing estimations and retrievals of its size and concentration. BC particles exist as aggregate structures with small monomers and are widely represented by the idealized fractal aggregate model. In reality, BC particles possess complex and nonideal minor structures besides the overall aggregate structure, altering their optical properties in unforeseen ways. This study introduces the parameter “volume variation” to quantify and unify different minor structures and develops an empirical relationship to account for their effects on BC optical properties from those of ideal aggregates. Minor structures considered are as follows: the polydispersity of monomer size, the irregularity and coating of the individual monomer, and necking and overlapping among monomers. The discrete dipole approximation is used to calculate the optical properties of aggregates with these minor structures. Minor structures result in scattering cross-section enhancement slightly more than that of absorption cross section, and their effects on the angle-dependent phase matrix as well as asymmetry factor are negligible. As expected, the effects become weaker with the increase in wavelength. Our results suggest that a correction ratio of 1.05 is necessary to account for the mass or volume normalized absorption and scattering of nonideal aggregates in comparison to ideal ones, which also applies to aggregates with multiple minor structures. In other words, the effects of minor structures are mainly contributed by their influence on particle volume/mass that cannot be ignored, and a relative difference of approximately 5 % is noticed after removing the volume effects. Thus, accurate knowledge and evaluation of BC volume/mass are more important than those of the minor structures themselves. Most importantly, the simulations of optical properties of nonideal aggregates are greatly simplified by applying the empirical relationship because they can be directly obtained from those of the corresponding ideal aggregates, a volume/mass difference parameter, and the correction factor, i.e., 1.05, not the detailed minor structure information. We expect this convenient treatment to find wide applications for the accounting for the effects of nonideal minor structures on BC optical properties.

Highlights

  • Black carbon (BC), produced by incomplete combustion of fossil fuels, biofuels, and biomass, is one of the strongest sunlight-absorbing atmospheric constituents (Jacobson, 2001; Andreae and Gelencsér, 2006)

  • This study systematically investigates the effects of several minor structures on the optical properties of BC aggregates, including the polydispersity of monomer size, monomer surface irregularity, coating, necking, and overlapping and develops a simple method to account for their effects from the optical properties of the corresponding idealized fractal aggregates

  • This study investigates the effects of different minor structures on the optical properties of BC aggregates and develops a simple empirical treatment to account for their effects from the optical properties of the corresponding ideal fractal aggregates

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Summary

Introduction

Black carbon (BC), produced by incomplete combustion of fossil fuels, biofuels, and biomass, is one of the strongest sunlight-absorbing atmospheric constituents (Jacobson, 2001; Andreae and Gelencsér, 2006). The overall fractal aggregate morphologies and their influences on the optical properties of BC particles have been well studied (Sorensen, 2001; Liu and Mishchenko, 2005; Kahnert and Devasthale, 2011). Small- to moderatescale coating in different forms have been considered in numerical models to study their effects on the optical properties, and the impact of coating on absorption was found to be, on average, 1.1 in the visible spectral range (Scarnato et al, 2013; Dong et al, 2015; Doner et al, 2017). This study systematically investigates the effects of several minor structures on the optical properties of BC aggregates, including the polydispersity of monomer size, monomer surface irregularity, coating, necking, and overlapping and develops a simple method to account for their effects from the optical properties of the corresponding idealized fractal aggregates.

Minor structures
Effects of minor structures
Findings
Conclusion
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