Major secondary aerosol formation in southern African open biomass burning plumes

被引:0
|
作者
Ville Vakkari
Johan P. Beukes
Miikka Dal Maso
Mika Aurela
Miroslav Josipovic
Pieter G. van Zyl
机构
[1] Finnish Meteorological Institute,
[2] Research and Development,undefined
[3] North-West University,undefined
[4] Unit for Environmental Sciences and Management,undefined
[5] Tampere University of Technology,undefined
[6] Laboratory of Physics,undefined
来源
Nature Geoscience | 2018年 / 11卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Open biomass burning contributes significantly to air quality degradation and associated human health impacts over large areas. It is one of the largest sources of reactive trace gases and fine particles to Earth’s atmosphere and consequently a major source of cloud condensation nuclei on a global scale. However, there is a large uncertainty in the climate effect of open biomass burning aerosols due to the complexity of their constituents. Here, we present an exceptionally large dataset on southern African savannah and grassland fire plumes and their atmospheric evolution, based on 5.5 years of continuous measurements from 2010 to 2015. We find that the mass of submicrometre aerosols more than doubles on average, in only three hours of daytime ageing. We also evaluate biomass burning aerosol particle size distributions and find a large discrepancy between the observations and current model parameterizations, especially in the 30–100 nm range. We conclude that accounting for near-source secondary organic aerosol formation and using measurement-based size distribution parameterizations in smoke plumes is essential to better constrain the climate and air quality effects of savannah and grassland fires.
引用
收藏
页码:580 / 583
页数:3
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Seasonal variations in the sources of organic aerosol in Xi'an, Northwest China: The importance of biomass burning and secondary formation
    Zhong, Haobin
    Huang, Ru-Jin
    Duan, Jing
    Lin, Chunshui
    Gu, Yifang
    Wang, Ying
    Li, Yongjie
    Zheng, Yan
    Chen, Qi
    Chen, Yang
    Dai, Wenting
    Ni, Haiyan
    Chang, Yunhua
    Worsnop, Douglas R.
    Xu, Wei
    Ovadnevaite, Jurgita
    Ceburnis, Darius
    O'Dowd, Colin D.
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2020, 737
  • [22] Remote sensing of carbonaceous aerosol production by African savanna biomass burning
    Liousse, C
    Dulac, F
    Cachier, H
    Tanre, D
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 1997, 102 (D5) : 5895 - 5911
  • [23] Undersizing of aged African biomass burning aerosol by an ultra-high-sensitivity aerosol spectrometer
    Howell, Steven G.
    Freitag, Steffen
    Dobracki, Amie
    Smirnow, Nikolai
    Sedlacek, Arthur J., III
    ATMOSPHERIC MEASUREMENT TECHNIQUES, 2021, 14 (11) : 7381 - 7404
  • [24] Using aircraft measurements to estimate the magnitude and uncertainty of the shortwave direct radiative forcing of southern African biomass burning aerosol
    Magi, Brian I.
    Fu, Qiang
    Redemann, Jens
    Schmid, Beat
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2008, 113 (D5)
  • [25] Characterization of secondary organic aerosol formation by aqueous reactions of iron (III) with biomass burning volatile organic compounds
    Chin, Henry
    Nizkorodov, Sergey
    Fleming, Lauren
    Al-Abadleh, Hind
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2019, 258
  • [26] Chemical characteristics of PM2.5 at a source region of biomass burning emissions: Evidence for secondary aerosol formation
    Rastogi, N.
    Singh, A.
    Singh, D.
    Sarin, M. M.
    ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION, 2014, 184 : 563 - 569
  • [27] Evolution of biomass burning aerosol properties from an agricultural fire in southern Africa
    Abel, SJ
    Haywood, JM
    Highwood, EJ
    Li, J
    Buseck, PR
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2003, 30 (15)
  • [28] Inferring the absorption properties of organic aerosol in Siberian biomass burning plumes from remote optical observations
    Konovalov, Igor B.
    Golovushkin, Nikolai A.
    Beekmann, Matthias
    Panchenko, Mikhail V.
    Andreae, Meinrat O.
    ATMOSPHERIC MEASUREMENT TECHNIQUES, 2021, 14 (10) : 6647 - 6673
  • [29] Geostationary aerosol retrievals of extreme biomass burning plumes during the 2019-2020 Australian bushfires
    Robbins, Daniel J. V.
    Poulsen, Caroline A.
    Siems, Steven T.
    Proud, Simon R.
    Prata, Andrew T.
    Grainger, Roy G.
    Povey, Adam C.
    ATMOSPHERIC MEASUREMENT TECHNIQUES, 2024, 17 (10) : 3279 - 3302
  • [30] Impact of Biomass Burning Plumes on Photolysis Rates and Ozone Formation at the Mount Bachelor Observatory
    Baylon, P.
    Jaffe, D. A.
    Hall, S. R.
    Ullmann, K.
    Alvarado, M. J.
    Lefer, B. L.
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2018, 123 (04) : 2272 - 2284