When smoke comes to town: The impact of biomass burning smoke on air quality

被引:0
作者
Keywood, Melita [1 ]
Cope, Martin [1 ]
Meyer, C.P. Mick [1 ]
Iinuma, Yoshi [2 ]
Emmerson, Kathryn [1 ]
机构
[1] CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere Flagship, PMB1 Aspendale, Victoria
[2] Leibniz-Institut fuer Troposphaerenforschung (TROPOS), Permoserstr. 15, Leipzig
关键词
Air quality; Photochemical aging; Secondary organic aerosol; Smoke;
D O I
10.1016/j.atmosenv.2015.03.050
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Biomass burning aerosols influence the radiative balance of the earth-atmosphere system. They also reduce visibility and impact human health. In addition, trace gases and aerosols emitted to the atmosphere during large biomass burning episodes may have a significant effect on atmospheric chemistry due to the presence of reactive species. Six hundred and ninety wildfires burned more than one million hectares in Victoria, Australia between December 2006 and February 2007. Thick smoke haze was transported to Melbourne (population 3.9 million) on several occasions, causing PM10 (particulate mass less than 10 μm in diameter) concentrations to exceed 200 μg m−3. The presence of elevated total secondary organic aerosol (SOA) and speciated SOA compounds (including pinene and cineole oxidation products), O3, and the larger aerosol mode diameter during smoke impacted periods indicated the presence of photochemical oxidation within the plume. The presence of organosulfate compounds and nitro-oxy organosulfate compounds indicated oxidation may have occurred in the presence of acidic seed aerosol and that oxidation may also have occurred at night. Older smoke plumes (aged 30 h) displayed higher concentrations of a number of gaseous and aerosol species relative to the younger smoke plumes (aged 3 h). SOA compounds made up a greater fraction of speciated organic mass in the old plume than in the young plume where speciated biomass burning compounds dominated. Cineole oxidation products made up a greater fraction of the speciated SOA compounds in the old plume while pinene oxidation products made up a greater fraction of the total SOA speciated mass in the samples from the young plume. This may be a result of the slower reaction rate of cineole with OH. Organosulfate compounds and nitro-oxy organosulfate compounds made up greater fractions of the speciated SOA mass in the old plume consistent with the production of nitro-oxy organosulfate compounds under night time conditions in the presence of acidic seed. These results suggest that enhanced photochemical activity occurs in smoke plumes and can significantly change the composition and microphysical properties of aerosol, potentially leading to changes in the optical and thus radiative properties of the aerosol. © 2015
引用
收藏
页码:13 / 21
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
[41]   Contributions of Open Biomass Burning and Crop Straw Burning to Air Quality: Current Research Paradigm and Future Outlooks [J].
Mehmood, Khalid ;
Bao, Yansong ;
Bibi, Sadia ;
Dahlawi, Saad ;
Yaseen, Muhammad ;
Abrar, Muhammad Mohsin ;
Srivastava, Prashant ;
Fahad, Shah ;
Faraj, Turki Kh. ;
Saifullah .
FRONTIERS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE, 2022, 10
[42]   Emission inventory processing of biomass burning from a global dataset for air quality modeling [J].
Ernesto Pino-Cortés ;
Samuel Carrasco ;
Luis A. Díaz-Robles ;
Francisco Cubillos ;
Fidel Vallejo ;
Francisco Cereceda-Balic ;
Joshua S. Fu .
Air Quality, Atmosphere & Health, 2022, 15 :721-729
[43]   Molecular distributions of dicarboxylic acids, ketocarboxylic acids and α-dicarbonyls in biomass burning aerosols: implications for photochemical production and degradation in smoke layers [J].
Kundu, S. ;
Kawamura, K. ;
Andreae, T. W. ;
Hoffer, A. ;
Andreae, M. O. .
ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2010, 10 (05) :2209-2225
[44]   Regional air quality: biomass burning impacts of SO2 emissions on air quality in the Himalayan region of Uttarakhand, India [J].
Alok Sagar Gautam ;
Sanjeev Kumar ;
Sneha Gautam ;
Karan Singh ;
Kripa Ram ;
Devendraa Siingh ;
Balram Ambade ;
Manish Sharma .
Air Quality, Atmosphere & Health, 2024, 17 :1-18
[45]   Emission inventory processing of biomass burning from a global dataset for air quality modeling [J].
Pino-Cortes, Ernesto ;
Carrasco, Samuel ;
Diaz-Robles, Luis A. ;
Cubillos, Francisco ;
Vallejo, Fidel ;
Cereceda-Balic, Francisco ;
Fu, Joshua S. .
AIR QUALITY ATMOSPHERE AND HEALTH, 2022, 15 (04) :721-729
[46]   Production of Secondary Organic Aerosol During Aging of Biomass Burning Smoke From Fresh Fuels and Its Relationship to VOC Precursors [J].
Ahern, A. T. ;
Robinson, E. S. ;
Tkacik, D. S. ;
Saleh, R. ;
Hatch, L. E. ;
Barsanti, K. C. ;
Stockwell, C. E. ;
Yokelson, R. J. ;
Presto, A. A. ;
Robinson, A. L. ;
Sullivan, R. C. ;
Donahue, N. M. .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2019, 124 (06) :3583-3606
[47]   Regional air quality: biomass burning impacts of SO2 emissions on air quality in the Himalayan region of Uttarakhand, India [J].
Gautam, Alok Sagar ;
Kumar, Sanjeev ;
Gautam, Sneha ;
Singh, Karan ;
Ram, Kripa ;
Siingh, Devendraa ;
Ambade, Balram ;
Sharma, Manish .
AIR QUALITY ATMOSPHERE AND HEALTH, 2024, 17 (01) :1-18
[48]   The impacts of transported wildfire smoke aerosols on surface air quality in New York State: A case study in summer 2018 [J].
Hung, Wei-Ting ;
Lu, Cheng-Hsuan ;
Shrestha, Bhupal ;
Lin, Hsiao-Chun ;
Lin, Chin-An ;
Grogan, Dustin ;
Hong, Jia ;
Ahmadov, Ravan ;
James, Eric ;
Joseph, Everette .
ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 2020, 227
[49]   Diagnosing uncertainties in global biomass burning emission inventories and their impact on modeled air pollutants [J].
Hua, Wenxuan ;
Lou, Sijia ;
Huang, Xin ;
Xue, Lian ;
Ding, Ke ;
Wang, Zilin ;
Ding, Aijun .
ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2024, 24 (11) :6787-6807
[50]   Using National Ambient Air Quality Standards for fine particulate matter to assess regional wildland fire smoke and air quality management [J].
Schweizer, Don ;
Cisneros, Ricardo ;
Traina, Samuel ;
Ghezzehei, Teamrat A. ;
Shaw, Glenn .
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2017, 201 :345-356