Mass accommodation coefficients of fresh and aged biomass-burning emissions

Most chemical transport models treat the partitioning of semi-volatile organic compounds (SVOCs) with the assumption of instantaneous thermodynamic equilibrium. However, the mass accommodation coefficients, α, of biomass-burning organic aerosol (BBOA) are largely unconstrained. During the FLAME-IV c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Aerosol science and technology 2018-03, Vol.52 (3), p.300-309
Hauptverfasser: Sinha, Aditya, Saleh, Rawad, Robinson, Ellis S., Ahern, Adam T., Tkacik, Daniel S., Presto, Albert A., Sullivan, Ryan C., Robinson, Allen L., Donahue, Neil M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Most chemical transport models treat the partitioning of semi-volatile organic compounds (SVOCs) with the assumption of instantaneous thermodynamic equilibrium. However, the mass accommodation coefficients, α, of biomass-burning organic aerosol (BBOA) are largely unconstrained. During the FLAME-IV campaign, we thermally perturbed aged and fresh BBOA with a variable residence time thermodenuder and measured the resulting change in particle mass concentration to restore equilibrium. We used this equilibration profile to retrieve an effective α for components of BBOA that dictated this profile and found that the mass accommodation coefficients lie within the range 0.1 ≪ α ⩽ 1. A simple plume dilution model shows a maximum of only a 7% difference between a dynamical and an instantaneous equilibrium partitioning model using our best-estimate value for α. This supports continued use of the equilibrium assumption to treat partitioning of biomass-burning emissions in chemical-transport models. Copyright © 2018 American Association for Aerosol Research
ISSN:0278-6826
1521-7388
DOI:10.1080/02786826.2017.1413488