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Vertical Distribution and Columnar Optical Properties of Springtime Biomass-Burning Aerosols over Northern Indochina during 2014 7-SEAS Campaign

Authors :
Wei-Nai Chen
Ta Chih Hsiao
Somporn Chantara
Serm Janjai
S. Buntoung
David M. Giles
Ellsworth J. Welton
Si Chee Tsay
Brent N. Holben
Sheng Hsiang Wang
Wan Wiriya
Tang Huang Lin
Neng Huei Lin
Sebastian A. Stewart
Xuan Anh Nguyen
Source :
Aerosol and Air Quality Research. 15:2037-2050
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Taiwan Association for Aerosol Research, 2015.

Abstract

In this study, the aerosol optical properties and vertical distributions in major biomass-burning emission area of northern Indochina were investigated using ground-based remote sensing (i.e., four Sun-sky radiometers and one lidar) during the Seven South East Asian Studies/Biomass-burning Aerosols & Stratocumulus Environment: Lifecycles & Interactions Experiment conducted during spring 2014. Despite the high spatial variability of the aerosol optical depth (AOD; which at 500 nm ranged from 0.75 to 1.37 depending on the site), the temporal variation of the daily AOD demonstrated a consistent pattern among the observed sites, suggesting the presence of widespread smoke haze over the region. Smoke particles were characterized as small (Angstrom exponent at 440–870 nm of 1.72 and fine mode fraction of 0.96), strongly absorbing (single-scattering albedo at 440 nm of 0.88), mixture of black and brown carbon particles (absorption Angstrom exponent at 440–870 nm of 1.5) suspended within the planetary boundary layer (PBL). Smoke plumes driven by the PBL dynamics in the mountainous region reached as high as 5 km above sea level; these plumes subsequently spread out by westerly winds over northern Vietnam, southern China, and the neighboring South China Sea. Moreover, the analysis of diurnal variability of aerosol loading and optical properties as well as vertical profile in relation to PBL development, fire intensity, and aerosol mixing showed that various sites exhibited different variability based on meteorological conditions, fuel type, site elevation, and proximity to biomass-burning sources. These local factors influence the aerosol characteristics in the region and distinguish northern Indochina smoke from other biomass-burning regions in the world.

Details

ISSN :
20711409 and 16808584
Volume :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Aerosol and Air Quality Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........231eb1e33fd196a9196662007db0a98b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4209/aaqr.2015.05.0310