Abstract

Abstract. Peat fires in Southeast Asia have become a major annual source of trace gases and particles to the regional–global atmosphere. The assessment of their influence on atmospheric chemistry, climate, air quality, and health has been uncertain partly due to a lack of field measurements of the smoke characteristics. During the strong 2015 El Niño event we deployed a mobile smoke sampling team in the Indonesian province of Central Kalimantan on the island of Borneo and made the first, or rare, field measurements of trace gases, aerosol optical properties, and aerosol mass emissions for authentic peat fires burning at various depths in different peat types. This paper reports the trace gas and aerosol measurements obtained by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, whole air sampling, photoacoustic extinctiometers (405 and 870 nm), and a small subset of the data from analyses of particulate filters. The trace gas measurements provide emission factors (EFs; grams of a compound per kilogram biomass burned) for up to ∼ 90 gases, including CO2, CO, CH4, non-methane hydrocarbons up to C10, 15 oxygenated organic compounds, NH3, HCN, NOx, OCS, HCl, etc. The modified combustion efficiency (MCE) of the smoke sources ranged from 0.693 to 0.835 with an average of 0.772 ± 0.053 (n = 35), indicating essentially pure smoldering combustion, and the emissions were not initially strongly lofted. The major trace gas emissions by mass (EF as g kg−1) were carbon dioxide (1564 ± 77), carbon monoxide (291 ± 49), methane (9.51 ± 4.74), hydrogen cyanide (5.75 ± 1.60), acetic acid (3.89 ± 1.65), ammonia (2.86 ± 1.00), methanol (2.14 ± 1.22), ethane (1.52 ± 0.66), dihydrogen (1.22 ± 1.01), propylene (1.07 ± 0.53), propane (0.989 ± 0.644), ethylene (0.961 ± 0.528), benzene (0.954 ± 0.394), formaldehyde (0.867 ± 0.479), hydroxyacetone (0.860 ± 0.433), furan (0.772 ± 0.035), acetaldehyde (0.697 ± 0.460), and acetone (0.691 ± 0.356). These field data support significant revision of the EFs for CO2 (−8 %), CH4 (−55 %), NH3 (−86 %), CO (+39 %), and other gases compared with widely used recommendations for tropical peat fires based on a lab study of a single sample published in 2003. BTEX compounds (benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, xylenes) are important air toxics and aerosol precursors and were emitted in total at 1.5 ± 0.6 g kg−1. Formaldehyde is probably the air toxic gas most likely to cause local exposures that exceed recommended levels. The field results from Kalimantan were in reasonable agreement with recent lab measurements of smoldering Kalimantan peat for “overlap species,” lending importance to the lab finding that burning peat produces large emissions of acetamide, acrolein, methylglyoxal, etc., which were not measurable in the field with the deployed equipment and implying value in continued similar efforts. The aerosol optical data measured include EFs for the scattering and absorption coefficients (EF Bscat and EF Babs, m2 kg−1 fuel burned) and the single scattering albedo (SSA) at 870 and 405 nm, as well as the absorption Ångström exponents (AAE). By coupling the absorption and co-located trace gas and filter data we estimated black carbon (BC) EFs (g kg−1) and the mass absorption coefficient (MAC, m2 g−1) for the bulk organic carbon (OC) due to brown carbon (BrC). Consistent with the minimal flaming, the emissions of BC were negligible (0.0055 ± 0.0016 g kg−1). Aerosol absorption at 405 nm was ∼ 52 times larger than at 870 nm and BrC contributed ∼ 96 % of the absorption at 405 nm. Average AAE was 4.97 ± 0.65 (range, 4.29–6.23). The average SSA at 405 nm (0.974 ± 0.016) was marginally lower than the average SSA at 870 nm (0.998 ± 0.001). These data facilitate modeling climate-relevant aerosol optical properties across much of the UV/visible spectrum and the high AAE and lower SSA at 405 nm demonstrate the dominance of absorption by the organic aerosol. Comparing the Babs at 405 nm to the simultaneously measured OC mass on filters suggests a low MAC ( ∼ 0.1) for the bulk OC, as expected for the low BC/OC ratio in the aerosol. The importance of pyrolysis (at lower MCE), as opposed to glowing (at higher MCE), in producing BrC is seen in the increase of AAE with lower MCE (r2 = 0.65).

Highlights

  • Many major atmospheric sources have been studied extensively with a wide range of instrumentation

  • This experiment was not well-designed for comparison, but we have noted excellent whole air sampling (WAS)/Fourier transform infrared spectrometer (FTIR) agreement previously under more rigorous, but drier, conditions (e.g., Christian et al, 2003; Hatch et al, 2016) and we found that these 2015 field WAS results compared well with online measurements during FLAME-4 peat fire sampling for many major species, as discussed later in the paper

  • C6–C10 alkanes summed to 0.87 ± 0.57 g kg−1, roughly consistent with the 0.59 g kg−1 of C6–C10 alkanes emitted by a peat fire sampled by two-dimensional gas chromatography (GC) in the FLAME-4 lab study (Hatch et al, 2015)

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Summary

Introduction

Many major atmospheric sources have been studied extensively with a wide range of instrumentation. Many important, complex BB emission sources have been rarely, if ever, characterized by comprehensive field measurements (Akagi et al, 2011) The largest of these undersampled BB sources is peatland fires, which occur primarily in boreal forests and in the tropics, especially the Indonesian provinces of Sumatra, Kalimantan, and Papua as well as Malaysian Borneo. The activities built on earlier work by the Kalimantan Forest and Climate Partnership (KFCP; Applegate et al, 2012; Ichsan et al, 2013, Graham et al, 2014a, b; Hooijer et al, 2014) established in 2009 and included fire-scene investigations; fire history documentation; vegetation and fuels mapping; hydraulic conductivity, water table, and subsidence monitoring with an extensive series of 515 wells and 81 subsidence poles along 70 km of transects; collecting peat samples for the FLAME4 laboratory emissions measurements; burned area mapping; and lidar transects to quantify depth of burn (Ballhorn et al, 2009). Additional aerosol results based on our filter sampling in the field coupled with a large suite of subsequent analyses will be reported in a companion paper (Jayarathne et al, 2016)

Site descriptions
Land-based Fourier transform infrared spectrometer
Whole air sampling in canisters
Other measurements
Emission ratio and emission factor determination
Trace gas emission factors
Aerosol optical properties and emission factors
Representativeness and comparison to other field studies
Application of emission factors
Value of lab data
Conclusions
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