| Literature DB >> 29799735 |
Ru-Jin Huang1, Lu Yang1, Junji Cao1, Yang Chen2, Qi Chen3, Yongjie Li4, Jing Duan1, Chongshu Zhu1, Wenting Dai1, Kai Wang1,5, Chunshui Lin1,6, Haiyan Ni1,7, Joel C Corbin8, Yunfei Wu9, Renjian Zhang9, Xuexi Tie1, Thorsten Hoffmann5, Colin O'Dowd6, Uli Dusek7.
Abstract
Light-absorbing organic carbon (i.e., brown carbon or BrC) in the atmospheric aerosol has significant contribution to light absorption and radiative forcing. However, the link between BrC optical properties and chemical composition remains poorly constrained. In this study, we combine spectrophotometric measurements and chemical analyses of BrC samples collected from July 2008 to June 2009 in urban Xi'an, Northwest China. Elevated BrC was observed in winter (5 times higher than in summer), largely due to increased emissions from wintertime domestic biomass burning. The light absorption coefficient of methanol-soluble BrC at 365 nm (on average approximately twice that of water-soluble BrC) was found to correlate strongly with both parent polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (parent-PAHs, 27 species) and their carbonyl oxygenated derivatives (carbonyl-OPAHs, 15 species) in all seasons ( r2 > 0.61). These measured parent-PAHs and carbonyl-OPAHs account for on average ∼1.7% of the overall absorption of methanol-soluble BrC, about 5 times higher than their mass fraction in total organic carbon (OC, ∼0.35%). The fractional solar absorption by BrC relative to element carbon (EC) in the ultraviolet range (300-400 nm) is significant during winter (42 ± 18% for water-soluble BrC and 76 ± 29% for methanol-soluble BrC), which may greatly affect the radiative balance and tropospheric photochemistry and therefore the climate and air quality.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29799735 DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b02386
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Technol ISSN: 0013-936X Impact factor: 9.028