Black carbon absorbs solar radiation, leading to a strong, but uncertain,
warming effect on climate. A key challenge in modeling and
quantifying BC’s radiative effect on climate is predicting enhancements
in light absorption that result from internal mixing between
BC and other aerosol components. Modeling and laboratory studies
show that BC, when mixed with other aerosol components, absorbs
more strongly than pure, uncoated BC; however, some ambient
observations suggest more variable and weaker absorption enhancement.
We show that the lower-than-expected enhancements
in ambient measurements result from a combination of two factors. First, the often used spherical, concentric core-shell approximation
generally over-estimates the absorption by BC. Second, and more
importantly, inadequate consideration of heterogeneity in particleto-
particle composition engenders substantial over-estimation in absorption
by the total particle population, with greater heterogeneity
associated with larger model-measurement differences. We
show that accounting for these two effects—variability in per-particle
composition and deviations from the core-shell approximation—
reconciles absorption enhancement predictions with laboratory and
field observations and resolves the apparent discrepancy. Further,
our consistent model framework provides a path forward for improving
predictions of BC’s radiative effect on climate.
Revised: April 27, 2020 |
Published: March 10, 2020
Citation
Fierce L., T.B. Onasch, C. Cappa, C. Mazzoleni, S. China, J. Bhandari, and P. Davidovits, et al. 2020.Radiative Absorption Enhancements By Black Carbon Controlled By Particle-to-particle Heterogeneity In Composition.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) 117, no. 10:5196-5203.PNNL-SA-151749.doi:10.1073/pnas.1919723117