Abstract

Recent observational studies suggest that nucleation-scavenging is the principal path to removing black carbon-containing aerosol from the atmosphere, thus affecting black carbon’s lifetime and radiative forcing. Modeling the process of nucleation-scavenging is challenging, since black carbon (BC) forms complex internal mixtures with other aerosol species. Here, we examined the impacts of black carbon mixing state on nucleation scavenging using the particle-resolved aerosol model PartMC-MOSAIC. This modeling approach has the unique advantage that complex aerosol mixing states can be represented on a per-particle level. For a scenario library that comprised hundreds of diverse aerosol populations, we quantified nucleation-scavenged BC mass fractions. Consistent with measurements, these vary widely, depending on the amount of BC, the amount of coating and coating material, as well as the environmental supersaturation. We quantified the error in the nucleation-scavenged black carbon mass fraction introduced when assuming an internally mixed distribution, and determined its bounds depending on environmental supersaturation and on the aerosol mixing state index χ . For a given χ value, the error decreased at higher supersaturations. For more externally mixed populations ( χ < 20 %), the nucleation-scavenged BC mass fraction could be overestimated by more than 1000% at supersaturations of 0.1%, while for more internally mixed populations ( χ > 75 %), the error was below 100% for the range of supersaturations (from 0.02% to 1%) investigated here. Accounting for black carbon mixing state and knowledge of the supersaturation of the environment are crucial when determining the amount of black carbon that can be incorporated into clouds.

Highlights

  • Black-carbon-containing aerosol particles are emitted from the combustion of fossil fuel, biomass, and biofuel [1,2,3,4,5]

  • Since we focus on aerosol activation, we grouped the aerosol model species according to their hygroscopicity into two surrogate species; black carbon (BC) and POA form one surrogate species as their hygroscopicity is very low

  • The solid red j lines and the shading indicate the average of f BC over all 384 cases and the corresponding standard deviation

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Summary

Introduction

Black-carbon-containing aerosol particles are emitted from the combustion of fossil fuel, biomass, and biofuel [1,2,3,4,5]. BC-containing aerosols modify the radiative budget directly by scattering and absorbing solar radiation, and indirectly by modifying cloud microphysical properties. Atmosphere 2018, 9, 17 as cloud condensation nuclei [10,11] They modify the snow albedo [12] after being deposited on Arctic snow after long-range transport [13], and warm the atmosphere where they reside, altering the local stability of the atmosphere [14]. This subsequently promotes accumulation of pollutants and impacts local air quality [15]

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