| Literature DB >> 32479722 |
Ru-Jin Huang1,2,3, Lu Yang1, Jincan Shen4, Wei Yuan1, Yuquan Gong1, Jie Guo1, Wenjuan Cao1, Jing Duan1, Haiyan Ni1,5, Chongshu Zhu1, Wenting Dai1, Yongjie Li6, Yang Chen7, Qi Chen8, Yunfei Wu9, Renjian Zhang9, Ulrike Dusek5, Colin O'Dowd10, Thorsten Hoffmann11.
Abstract
The chromophores responsible for light absorption in atmospheric brown carbon (BrC) are not well characterized, which hinders our understanding of BrC chemistry, the links with optical properties, and accurate model representations of BrC to global climate and atmospheric oxidative capacity. In this study, the light absorption properties and chromophore composition of three BrC fractions of different polarities were characterized for urban aerosol collected in Xi'an and Beijing in winter 2013-2014. These three BrC fractions show large differences in light absorption and chromophore composition, but the chromophores responsible for light absorption are similar in Xi'an and Beijing. Water-insoluble BrC (WI-BrC) fraction dominates the total BrC absorption at 365 nm in both Xi'an (51 ± 5%) and Beijing (62 ± 13%), followed by a humic-like fraction (HULIS-BrC) and high-polarity water-soluble BrC. The major chromophores identified in HULIS-BrC are nitrophenols and carbonyl oxygenated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (OPAHs) with 2-3 aromatic rings (in total 18 species), accounting for 10% and 14% of the light absorption of HULIS-BrC at 365 nm in Xi'an and Beijing, respectively. In comparison, the major chromophores identified in WI-BrC are PAHs and OPAHs with 4-6 aromatic rings (in total 16 species), contributing 6% and 8% of the light absorption of WI-BrC at 365 nm in Xi'an and Beijing, respectively.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32479722 DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.0c01149
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Technol ISSN: 0013-936X Impact factor: 9.028