Chemical composition of wildland and agricultural biomass burning particles measured downwind during the BBOP study

 

Authors

Timothy B Onasch — Aerodyne Research, Inc.
John E Shilling — Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Joda Wormhoudt — Aerodyne Research, Inc.
Arthur J Sedlacek — Brookhaven National Laboratory
Ed Fortner — Aerodyne Research, Inc.
Mikhail S. Pekour — Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Duli Chand — Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Shan Zhou — University of California, Davis
Sonya Collier — University of California
Qi Zhang — University of California, Davis
Larry Kleinman — Brookhaven National Laboratory
Ernie R. Lewis — Brookhaven National Laboratory
Robert James Yokelson — University of Montana
Kouji Adachi — Meteorological Research Institute
Peter R. Buseck — Arizona State University
Andrew Freedman — Aerodyne Research, Inc.
Leah R Williams — Aerodyne Research Inc

Category

ARM field campaigns – Results from recent ARM field campaigns

Description

The Biomass Burning Observation Project (BBOP), a Department of Energy (DOE) sponsored study, measured emissions from wildland fires in the Pacific Northwest and agricultural burns in the Central Southeastern US from the DOE Gulfstream-1 airborne platform over a four month period in 2013. Rapid physical, chemical and optical changes in biomass burning particles were measured downwind (< 3 hours temporally) from wildland fires. The chemical composition of the particulate emissions was characterized using an Aerodyne Soot Particle Aerosol Mass Spectrometer (SP-AMS) and a Single Particle Soot Photometer (SP2) and will be presented in the context of the fire location, combustion conditions, and optical property measurements, including extinction and single scattering albedos. The SP-AMS was operated with both laser and resistively heated tungsten vaporizers, alternating between laser on and off. With the laser vaporizer off, the instrument operated as a standard high resolution AMS. Under these sampling conditions, the non-refractory chemical composition, including the level of oxidation (i.e., O:C, H:C, and organic mass/organic carbon ratios, OM:OC), of the biomass burning particles was characterized as a function of the fuel type burned, modified combustion efficiency, and degree of oxidation during downwind transport. With the laser vaporizer on, the SP-AMS was also sensitive to the refractory black carbon (rBC) content, in addition to the non-refractory components. The chemical measurements will be correlated with simultaneous optical measurements. We will also present preliminary results from laboratory studies on tar balls and SP-AMS quantification while operating with both laser and tungsten vaporizers.