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Characterising Mass-resolved Mixing State of Black Carbon in Beijing Using a Morphology-Independent Measurement Method.

Authors :
Chenjie Yu
Dantong Liu
Broda, Kurtis
Joshi, Rutambhara
Olfert, Jason
Yele Sun
Pingqing Fu
Hugh Coe
Allan, James D.
Source :
Atmospheric Chemistry & Physics Discussions; 2019, p1-25, 25p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Refractory Black Carbon (rBC) in the atmosphere is known for its significant impact on the climate system in the atmosphere. The relationship between the microphysical and optical properties of rBC remain uncertain and are largely influenced by the size, coating thickness and mixing state of particles. This study presents a coupling of a centrifugal particle mass analyser (CPMA) and a single particle soot photometer (SP2) for the morphology-independent quantification of the mixing state of rBC-containing particles, used in the urban site of Beijing as part of the Air Pollution and Human Health-Beijing (APHH-Beijing) project during winter (10<superscript>th</superscript> Nov–10<superscript>th</superscript> Dec) and summer (18<superscript>th</superscript> May–25<superscript>th</superscript> June). An inversion method is applied to the measurements to present a two-variable distribution of both rBC core mass and total mass of rBC-containing particles and present the mass-resolved mixing state of rBC-containing particles. The mass ratio between non-rBC coating and rBC core (MR) is calculated to determine the coating thickness of the rBC-containing particles. The bulk MR was found to vary between 2–12 in winter and between 2–3 in summer. This mass-resolved mixing state is used to derive the mixing state index (χ) for the rBC-containing particles. χ quantifies whether the coating is evenly distributed across the rBC-containing particle population and is used to determine the degree of internal and external mixture of rBC-containing particles. The rBC-containing particles in Beijing were found to be 55%–70 % internally mixed in winter depending on the dominant air masses. χ of rBC-containing particles was highly positively associated with increased bulk MR, rBC mass loading or pollution level in winter, whereas χ of rBC-containing particles in summer varied significantly (ranging 60 %–75 %) within the narrowly-distributed bulk MR and was found to be independent of air mass sources. This concludes that the bulk MR may only act as a predictor of mixing state in winter, and χ is better to quantify the mixing state of rBC-containing particles. The same level of bulk MR corresponded with a higher χ in summer than in winter and this tended to suggest a limited formation of coatings on rBC largely depended on primary sources. However, with the higher Non-refractory PM<subscript>1</subscript> (NR-PM<subscript>1</subscript>) concentration in winter, the coagulation process may still lead relative thick coatings. In summer the higher secondary compounds made the rBC-containing particles more homogeneous. But due to the higher temperatures and limited pollution level, the coating thickness in summer is limited. The mixing state of rBC-containing particles should also depend on the coating formation mechanism, both primary source influence and secondary coating formation mechanism should be considered in interpreting the rBC-containing particles mixing state in the atmosphere. This particle morphology-independent and mass-based data format as introduced in this study could be conviently applied in particle-resolved or other process models to investigate atmospheric rBC aging and mixing state properties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16807367
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Atmospheric Chemistry & Physics Discussions
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
137263363
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-2019-428