Abstract

Abstract. Landscape fires are a significant contributor to atmospheric burdens of greenhouse gases and aerosols. Although many studies have looked at biomass burning products and their fate in the atmosphere, estimating and tracing atmospheric pollution from landscape fires based on atmospheric measurements are challenging due to the large variability in fuel composition and burning conditions. Stable carbon isotopes in biomass burning (BB) emissions can be used to trace the contribution of C3 plants (e.g. trees or shrubs) and C4 plants (e.g. savanna grasses) to various combustion products. However, there are still many uncertainties regarding changes in isotopic composition (also known as fractionation) of the emitted carbon compared to the burnt fuel during the pyrolysis and combustion processes. To study BB isotope fractionation, we performed a series of laboratory fire experiments in which we burned pure C3 and C4 plants as well as mixtures of the two. Using isotope ratio mass spectrometry (IRMS), we measured stable carbon isotope signatures in the pre-fire fuels and post-fire residual char, as well as in the CO2, CO, CH4, organic carbon (OC), and elemental carbon (EC) emissions, which together constitute over 98 % of the post-fire carbon. Our laboratory tests indicated substantial isotopic fractionation in combustion products compared to the fuel, which varied between the measured fire products. CO2, EC, and residual char were the most reliable tracers of the fuel 13C signature. CO in particular showed a distinct dependence on burning conditions; flaming emissions were enriched in 13C compared to smouldering combustion emissions. For CH4 and OC, the fractionation was the other way round for C3 emissions (13C-enriched) and C4 emissions (13C-depleted). This indicates that while it is possible to distinguish between fires that were dominated by either C3 or C4 fuels using these tracers, it is more complicated to quantify their relative contribution to a mixed-fuel fire based on the δ13C signature of emissions. Besides laboratory experiments, we sampled gases and carbonaceous aerosols from prescribed fires in the Niassa Special Reserve (NSR) in Mozambique, using an unmanned aerial system (UAS)-mounted sampling set-up. We also provided a range of C3:C4 contributions to the fuel and measured the fuel isotopic signatures. While both OC and EC were useful tracers of the C3-to-C4 fuel ratio in mixed fires in the lab, we found particularly OC to be depleted compared to the calculated fuel signal in the field experiments. This suggests that either our fuel measurements were incomprehensive and underestimated the C3:C4 ratio in the field or other processes caused this depletion. Although additional field measurements are needed, our results indicate that C3-vs.-C4 source ratio estimation is possible with most BB products, albeit with varying uncertainty ranges.

Highlights

  • Biomass burning (BB) is an important source of carbonaceous trace gas and aerosol emissions, affecting climate change and air quality

  • In a series of laboratory fire experiments with various fuel mixtures and combustion conditions, we tested (1) the relative partitioning of carbon into the reaction products, (2) how well these products retained the δ13C signature of the consumed fuel, (3) whether fractionation was different under different combustion conditions, and (4) whether we can close the isotopic budget of the fire

  • Our results indicated that the precursor plant material was the most important indicator for the isotopic δ13C signature in the emitted products, different combustion pathways in different fuel compounds as well as the kinetic isotope effect led to isotopic fractionation

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Summary

Introduction

Biomass burning (BB) is an important source of carbonaceous trace gas and aerosol emissions, affecting climate change and air quality. The savanna biome accounts for more than half of the global BB-related carbon emissions (van der Werf et al, 2017). During pyrolysis and subsequent combustion, this emitted carbon is transformed into a large variety of chemical compounds (Andreae, 2019; Yokelson et al, 2013). Emission factors (EFs) describe the amount of a compound that is emitted by burning a kilogram of dry biomass (g kg−1). The modified combustion efficiency (MCE), calculated as CO2/( CO+ CO2) (molar emission ratio) (Ward and Radke, 1993), is an indicator of the completeness of the oxidation process and inversely correlated with the EFs of reduced species like methane, non-methane hydrocarbons (NMHCs), and organic particulate matter (PM) (Urbanski, 2013)

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