May 27, 2017
Journal Article

Broadband optical properties of biomass-burning aerosol and identification of brown carbon chromophores

Abstract

The radiative effects of biomass burning aerosols on regional and global scale is substantial. Accurate modeling of the radiative effects of smoke aerosols require wavelength-dependent measurements and parameterizations of their optical properties in the UV and visible spectral ranges along with improved description of their chemical composition. To address this issue, we used a recently developed approach to retrieve the time- and spectral-dependent optical properties of ambient biomass burning aerosols between 300 and 650 nm wavelength during a regional bonfire festival in Israel. During the biomass burning event, the overall absorption at 400 nm increased by about two orders of magnitude, changing the size-weighted single scattering albedo from a background level of 0.95 to 0.7. Based on the new retrieval method, we provide parameterizations of the wavelength-dependent effective complex refractive index from 350 to 650 nm for freshly emitted and aged biomass burning aerosols. In addition, PM2.5 filter samples were collected for detailed off-line chemical analysis of the water soluble organics that contribute to light absorption. Nitrophenols were identified as the main organic species responsible for the increased absorption at 400-500 nm. These include species such as 4- nitrocatechol, 4-nitrophenol, nitro-syringol and nitro-guaiacol; oxidation-nitration products of methoxyphenols, known products of lignin pyrolysis. Our findings emphasize the importance of both primary and secondary organic aerosol from biomass burning in absorption of solar radiation and in effective radiative forcing.

Revised: June 29, 2017 | Published: May 27, 2017

Citation

Bluvshtein N., P. Lin, J.M. Flores, L. Segev, Y. Mazar, E. Tas, and G. Snider, et al. 2017. Broadband optical properties of biomass-burning aerosol and identification of brown carbon chromophores. Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres 122, no. 10:5441-5456. PNNL-SA-122306. doi:10.1002/2016JD026230