Black Carbon Size in Snow of Chinese Altai Mountain in Central Asia

被引:0
作者
Yulan Zhang
Shichang Kang
Tanguang Gao
Michael Sprenger
Wei Zhang
Zhaoqing Wang
机构
[1] Chinese Academy of Sciences,State Key Laboratory of Cryospheric Science, Northwest Institute of Eco
[2] Lanzhou University,Environment and Resources
[3] ETH Zurich,Key Laboratory of Western China’s Environmental System (Ministry of Education), College of Earth and Environmental Sciences
[4] University of Chinese Academy of Sciences,Institute for Atmospheric and Climate Science
来源
Advances in Atmospheric Sciences | 2023年 / 40卷
关键词
black carbon; snow cover; snow melting; Central Asia; 黑碳; 积雪; 积雪消融; 中亚;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Black carbon (BC) in snow plays an important role to accelerate snow melting. However, current studies mostly focused on BC concentrations, few on their size distributions in snow which affected BC’s effect on albedo changes. Here we presented refractory BC (rBC) concentrations and size distributions in snow collected from Chinese Altai Mountains in Central Asia from November 2016 to April 2017. The results revealed that the average rBC concentrations were 5.77 and 2.82 ng g−1 for the surface snow and sub-surface snow, which were relatively higher in the melting season (April) than that in winter (November–January). The mass median volume-equivalent diameter of rBC size in surface snow was approximately at 120–150 nm, which was typically smaller than that in the atmosphere (about 200 nm for urban atmosphere). However, there existed no specific mass median volume-equivalent diameter of BC size for sub-surface snow in winter. While during the melting season, the median mass size of rBC in sub-surface snow was similar to that in surface snow. Backward trajectories indicated that anthropogenic sourced BC dominated rBC in snow (70%–85%). This study will promote our understanding on BC size distributions in snow, and highlight the possible impact of BC size on climate effect.
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页码:1199 / 1211
页数:12
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