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Black carbon and wavelength-dependent aerosol absorption in the North China Plain based on two-year aethalometer measurements

Light-absorbing components of atmospheric aerosols have gained particular attention in recent years due to their climatic and environmental effects. Based on two-year measurements of aerosol absorption at seven wavelengths, aerosol absorption properties and black carbon (BC) were investigated in the...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Atmospheric environment (1994) 2016-10, Vol.142, p.132-144
Main Authors: Ran, L., Deng, Z.Z., Wang, P.C., Xia, X.A.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Light-absorbing components of atmospheric aerosols have gained particular attention in recent years due to their climatic and environmental effects. Based on two-year measurements of aerosol absorption at seven wavelengths, aerosol absorption properties and black carbon (BC) were investigated in the North China Plain (NCP), one of the most densely populated and polluted regions in the world. Aerosol absorption was stronger in fall and the heating season (from November to March) than in spring and summer at all seven wavelengths. Similar spectral dependence of aerosol absorption was observed in non-heating seasons despite substantially strong absorption in fall. With an average absorption Angström exponent (α) of 1.36 in non-heating seasons, freshly emitted BC from local fossil fuel burning was thought to be the major component of light-absorbing aerosols. In the heating season, strong ultraviolet absorption led to an average α of 1.81, clearly indicating the importance of non-BC light-absorbing components, which were possibly from coal burning for domestic heating and aging processes on a regional scale. Diurnally, the variation of BC mass concentrations experienced a double-peak pattern with a higher level at night throughout the year. However, the diurnal cycle of α in the heating season was distinctly different from that in non-heating seasons. α peaked in the late afternoon in non-heating seasons with concomitantly observed low valley in BC mass concentrations. In contrast, α peaked around the midnight in the heating season and lowered down during the daytime. The relationship of aerosol absorption and winds in non-heating seasons also differed from that in the heating season. BC mass concentrations declined while α increased with increasing wind speed in non-heating seasons, which suggested elevated non-BC light absorbers in transported aged aerosols. No apparent dependence of α on wind speed was found in the heating season, probably due to well mixed regional pollution. Pollution episodes were mostly encountered under low winds and had a low level of α, implying aerosol absorption should be largely attributed to freshly emitted BC from local sources under such conditions. Extensive field campaigns and long-term chemical and optical measurements of light-absorbing aerosols are needed in the future to further advance our understanding on optical properties of light-absorbing aerosols and their radiative forcing in this region. •Two-year spectral aeroso
ISSN:1352-2310
1873-2844
DOI:10.1016/j.atmosenv.2016.07.014