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- Title
Aging of aerosols emitted from biomass burning in northern Australia.
- Authors
Milic, Andelija; Mallet, Marc D.; Cravigan, Luke T.; Alroe, Joel; Ristovski, Zoran D.; Selleck, Paul; Lawson, Sarah J.; Ward, Jason; Desservettaz, Maximilien J.; Paton-Walsh, Clare; Williams, Leah R.; Keywood, Melita D.; Miljevic, Branka
- Abstract
There is a lack of knowledge of how biomass burning aerosols in the tropics age, including those in the fire-prone Northern Territory in Australia. This paper reports chemical characterization and aging of aerosols monitored during the one month long SAFIRED (Savannah Fires in the Early Dry Season) field study, with an emphasis on chemical signature and aging of organic aerosols. The campaign took place in June 2014 during the early dry season when the surface measurement site, the Australian Tropical Atmospheric Research Station (ATARS), located in the Northern Territory, was heavily influenced by thousands of wild and prescribed bushfires. ATARS was equipped with a wide suite of instrumentation for gaseous and aerosol characterization. A compact time-of-flight aerosol mass spectrometer was deployed to monitor aerosol chemical composition. Approximately 80% of submicron carbonaceous mass and 90% of submicron non-refractory mass was composed of organic material. Ozone enhancement in biomass burning plumes indicated increased air mass photochemistry and increased organic aerosol and particle diameter with the aging parameter (f44) suggested secondary organic aerosol formation. Diversity of biomass burning emissions was illustrated through variability in chemical signature (e.g. wide range in f44, from 0.06 to 0.13) for five intense fire events. The background particulate loading was characterized using Positive Matrix Factorization (PMF). A PMF-resolved BBOA (biomass burning organic aerosol) factor comprised 24% of the submicron non-refractory organic aerosol mass, confirming the significance of fire sources. A dominant PMF factor, OOA (oxygenated organic aerosol), made up 47% of sampled aerosol fraction, illustrating the importance of aerosol aging in the Northern Territory. Biogenic IEPOX-SOA (isoprene epoxydiols-related secondary organic aerosol) was the third significant fraction of the background aerosol (28%).
- Subjects
NORTHERN Australia; ATMOSPHERIC aerosols; BIOMASS burning; METEOROLOGICAL stations; TIME-of-flight mass spectrometers; ATMOSPHERIC composition
- Publication
Atmospheric Chemistry & Physics Discussions, 2016, p1
- ISSN
1680-7367
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.5194/acp-2016-730