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Assessing the role of anthropogenic and biogenic sources on PM₁ over southern West Africa using aircraft measurements

Authors :
Brito, Joel
Freney, Evelyn
Dominutti, Pamela
Borbon, Agnes
Haslett, Sophie L.
Batenburg, Anneke M.
Colomb, Aurelie
Dupuy, Regis
Denjean, Cyrielle
Burnet, Frederic
Bourriane, Thierry
Deroubaix, Adrien
Sellegri, Karine
Borrmann, Stephan
Coe, Hugh
Flamant, Cyrille
Knippertz, Peter
Schwarzenboeck, Alfons
Source :
Atmospheric chemistry and physics, 18 (2), 757–772
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
European Geosciences Union, 2018.

Abstract

As part of the Dynamics-Aerosol-Chemistry-Cloud Interactions in West Africa (DACCIWA) project, an airborne campaign was designed to measure a large range of atmospheric constituents, focusing on the effect of anthropogenic emissions on regional climate. The presented study details results of the French ATR42 research aircraft, which aimed to characterize gas-phase, aerosol and cloud properties in the region during the field campaign carried out in June/July 2016 in combination with the German Falcon 20 and the British Twin Otter aircraft. The aircraft flight paths covered large areas of Benin, Togo, Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire, focusing on emissions from large urban conurbations such as Abidjan, Accra and Lomé, as well as remote continental areas and the Gulf of Guinea. This paper focuses on aerosol particle measurements within the boundary layer ( 15 nm) of 735 cm−3 stp. Regarding submicron aerosol composition (considering non-refractory species and black carbon, BC), organic aerosol (OA) is the most abundant species contributing 53 %, followed by SO4 (27 %), NH4 (11 %), BC (6 %), NO3 (2 %) and minor contribution of Cl (

Subjects

Subjects :
Earth sciences
ddc:550

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16807316 and 16807324
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Atmospheric chemistry and physics, 18 (2), 757–772
Accession number :
edsair.od......3596..ee326ad62038af8d548f43f0903c428d