Abstract

Abstract. In this study a photoacoustic spectrometer (PA), a laser-induced incandescence instrument system (LII) and an Aerosol Mass Spectrometer were operated in parallel for in-situ measurements of black carbon (BC) light absorption enhancement. Results of a thermodenuder experiment using ambient particles in Toronto are presented first to show that LII measurements of BC are not influenced by the presence of non-refractory material thus providing true atmospheric BC mass concentrations. In contrast, the PA response is enhanced when the non-refractory material is internally mixed with the BC particles. Through concurrent measurements using the LII and PA the specific absorption cross-section (SAC) can be quantified with high time resolution (1 min). Comparisons of ambient PA and LII measurements from four different locations (suburban Toronto; a street canyon with diesel bus traffic in Ottawa; adjacent to a commuter highway in Ottawa and; regional background air in and around Windsor, Ontario), show that different impacts from emission sources and/or atmospheric processes result in different particle light absorption enhancements and hence variations in the SAC. The diversity of measurements obtained, including those with the thermodenuder, demonstrated that it is possible to identify measurements where the presence of externally-mixed non-refractory particles obscures direct observation of the effect of coating material on the SAC, thus allowing this effect to be measured with more confidence. Depending upon the time and location of measurement (urban, rural, close to and within a lake breeze frontal zone), 30 min average SAC varies between 9 ± 2 and 43 ± 4 m2 g−1. Causes of this variation, which were determined through the use of meteorological and gaseous measurements (CO, SO2, O3), include the particle emission source, airmass source region, the degree of atmospheric processing. Observations from this study also show that the active surface area of the BC aggregate, which is measured by the LII as the PPS, is an important parameter for inferring the degree of particle collapse of a BC particle. In addition, PPS could be a useful measurement for indicating the importance of recently emitted BC (e.g. from gasoline or diesel engines) relative to the total measured BC in the atmosphere.

Highlights

  • Black carbon (BC) particles are released into the atmosphere from incomplete combustion of fossil and biofuels, and biomass burning (Horvath, 1993)

  • Observations from this study show that the active surface area of the black carbon (BC) aggregate, which is measured by the laserinduced incandescence (LII) as the primary particle size (PPS), is an important parameter for inferring the degree of particle collapse of a BC particle

  • A thermodenuder was used at an urban site to study the effect of volatile and semi-volatile particle coating mass on fine BC particles using photoacoustic spectrometer (PA) and laserinduced incandescence (LII) instruments

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Summary

Introduction

Black carbon (BC) particles are released into the atmosphere from incomplete combustion of fossil and biofuels, and biomass burning (Horvath, 1993). In the second component of our experiment, the instruments were deployed to contrasting locations to measure the ambient BC particles using the LII and PA, but without thermodenuder alterations These measurements were undertaken to determine if it is possible to observe in-situ urban to regional scale variations in the coating effect on BC light absorption properties within different air masses. During BAQS-Met the mobile lab was deployed to an industrially-impacted urban site in west Windsor, Ontario, and to rural locations in southwestern Ontario Through these strategic deployments our objective was to quantify the range of variability in the coating enhancement in BC light absorption, to understand how quickly the enhancement can change due to changes in coating relative to BC mass, and possible causes of these changes related to BC www.atmos-chem-phys.net/11/10407/2011/. The SAC results in this study were quantified with 1 min time resolution from a combination of measurements using the LII and PA instruments

Thermodenuder experiment
Ottawa highway and urban street canyon
BAQS-Met field study
Black carbon measurement
Aerosol mass spectrometer
Particle losses in the thermodenuder
Black carbon observations from the PA and LII
Air quality comparison among different sites
Comparison of the observed SAC and previous literature values
SAC versus non-refractory mass to BC mass ratio across different sites
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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