Limited impact of sulfate-driven chemistry on black carbon aerosol aging in power plant plumes

The aging of refractory black carbon (rBC) aerosol by sulfate-driven chemistry has been constrained in coal-fired power-plant plumes using the NOAA WP-3D research aircraft during the Southern Nexus (SENEX) study, which took place in the Southeastern US in June and July of 2013. A Single Particle Soo...

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Veröffentlicht in:AIMS environmental science 2018-01, Vol.5 (3), p.195-215
Hauptverfasser: Z. Markovic, Milos, E. Perring, Anne, Gao, Ru-Shan, Liao, Jin, Welti, Andre, L. Wagner, Nick, B. Pollack, Ilana, M. Middlebrook, Ann, B. Ryerson, Thomas, K. Trainer, Michael, Warneke, Carsten, A. de Gouw, Joost, W. Fahey, David, Stier, Philip, P. Schwarz, Joshua
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The aging of refractory black carbon (rBC) aerosol by sulfate-driven chemistry has been constrained in coal-fired power-plant plumes using the NOAA WP-3D research aircraft during the Southern Nexus (SENEX) study, which took place in the Southeastern US in June and July of 2013. A Single Particle Soot Photometer (SP2) determined the microphysical properties of rBC-containing particles including single-particle rBC mass and the presence and amount of internally-mixed non-rBC material, hereafter referred to as “coatings”. Most power-plant influenced air was associated with very slightly increased amounts of non-refractory material, likely sulfate internally mixed with the rBC, however this increase was statistically insignificant even after semi-Lagrangian exposure for up to 5 h. On average, the increase in coating thickness was 2 ± 4 nm for particles containing 3–5 fg rBC. Similarly, the number fraction of rBC-containing particles that could be identified as internally mixed was increased by plume chemistry by only 1.3 ± 1.3%. These direct measurements of microphysical aging of rBC-containing aerosol by power plant emissions constrain the enhancement of sulfate chemistry on both rBC’s column-integrated absorption optical depth, and rBC-containing aerosol’s ability to act as cloud condensation nuclei. Appling Mie and k -Köhler theories to the SP2 observations, permits the resulting effect on rBC ambient light-absorption to be capped at the 2–6% level.
ISSN:2372-0352
DOI:10.3934/environsci.2018.3.195