Impact of the initial hydrophilic ratio on black carbon aerosols in the Arctic

被引:3
|
作者
Han, Yunman [1 ]
Fu, Bo [1 ]
Tao, Shu [1 ]
Zhu, Dongqiang [1 ]
Wang, Xuhui [1 ]
Peng, Shushi [1 ]
Li, Bengang [1 ]
机构
[1] Peking Univ, Coll Urban & Environm Sci, Sino French Inst Earth Syst Sci, Lab Earth Surface Proc, Beijing 100871, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Black carbon; Arctic; Hydrophilicity; PKU-BC-v2; Contribution; GEOS-Chem; MIXING STATE; OPTICAL-PROPERTIES; CLIMATE IMPACT; TRANSPORT; MODEL; EMISSIONS; SOOT; CONSTRAINTS; VARIABILITY; ABSORPTION;
D O I
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.153044
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Black carbon (BC) contributes to patterns of Arctic warming, yet the initial hydrophilic ratio (IHR) of BC emitted from various sources and its impact on Arctic BC remain uncertain. With the use of a tagged tracer method of BC implemented in the global chemistry transport model GEOS-Chem, IHRs were partitioned into 7 BC combustion source categories according to the PKU-BC-v2 emission inventory. The results show that as the IHR increased, the concentration of BC decreased globally. The impact on Arctic BC was mainly reflected in the vertical profile and the burden rather than at the surface. Specifically, the greatest impact of IHR on Arctic BC appeared in summer, with the largest perturbation appearing at an altitude of approximately 600 hPa, reaching 8%. This change in BC vertical profile was mainly caused by the IHR change of wildfire combustion in Russia (44%) and Canada (51%), and the emissions from these two regions were also the two most important contributors to the BC concentration and burden in the middle and lower Arctic atmosphere in summer. In the other three seasons, anthropogenic combustion sources (oil, coal, and biomass) in East Asia, Russia, and Europe accounted for 19-40%, 14-28%, and 7-23%, respectively, of the monthly BC burden. Emissions from Russia were the most important contributor (27-43%) to the monthly BC surface concentration. Due to the large adjustment in IHR from 20% to 70%, biomass burning in Europe was shown to be the dominant contributor causing both burden (39%) and surface concentration (88%) changes in all seasons except summer.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Black Carbon and Inorganic Aerosols in Arctic Snowpack
    Mori, Tatsuhiro
    Goto-Azuma, Kumiko
    Kondo, Yutaka
    Ogawa-Tsukagawa, Yoshimi
    Miura, Kazuhiko
    Hirabayashi, Motohiro
    Oshima, Naga
    Koike, Makoto
    Kupiainen, Kaarle
    Moteki, Nobuhiro
    Ohata, Sho
    Sinha, P. R.
    Sugiura, Konosuke
    Aoki, Teruo
    Schneebeli, Martin
    Steffen, Konrad
    Sato, Atsushi
    Tsushima, Akane
    Makarov, Vladimir
    Omiya, Satoshi
    Sugimoto, Atsuko
    Takano, Shinya
    Nagatsuka, Naoko
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2019, 124 (23) : 13325 - 13356
  • [2] Dry Deposition of Hydrophilic Black Carbon Aerosols in China
    Zhang, Xiaolin
    Mohammed, Awad Hussien Ahmed
    Zhou, Yu
    Mao, Mao
    ATMOSPHERE, 2023, 14 (07)
  • [3] Scavenging ratio of black carbon in the Arctic and the Antarctic
    Gogoi, Mukunda M.
    Babu, S. Suresh
    Pandey, Santosh K.
    Nair, Vijayakumar S.
    Vaishya, Aditya
    Girach, I. A.
    Koushik, N.
    POLAR SCIENCE, 2018, 16 : 10 - 22
  • [4] On board measurement of black carbon aerosols over the Arctic Ocean in summer
    TANG Jie1
    2Chinese Academy of Meteorological Sciences
    AdvancesinPolarScience, 2011, 22 (04) : 253 - 259
  • [5] Arctic Oscillation Responses to Black Carbon Aerosols Emitted from Major Regions
    WAN Jiang-Hua
    LI Shuanglin
    AtmosphericandOceanicScienceLetters, 2015, 8 (04) : 226 - 232
  • [6] East Siberian Arctic background and black carbon polluted aerosols at HMO Tiksi
    Popovicheva, O.
    Diapouli, E.
    Makshtas, A.
    Shonija, N.
    Manousakas, M.
    Saraga, D.
    Uttal, T.
    Eleftheriadis, K.
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2019, 655 : 924 - 938
  • [7] Arctic Oscillation Responses to Black Carbon Aerosols Emitted from Major Regions
    Wan Jiang-Hua
    Li Shuanglin
    ATMOSPHERIC AND OCEANIC SCIENCE LETTERS, 2015, 8 (04) : 226 - 232
  • [8] Black carbon aerosols impact snowfall over the Tibetan Plateau
    Zhou, Ye
    Xu, Mian
    Yang, Junhua
    Kang, Shichang
    Hu, Yuling
    Chen, Xintong
    Ma, Mengmeng
    GEOSCIENCE FRONTIERS, 2025, 16 (02)
  • [9] Siberian Arctic black carbon: gas flaring and wildfire impact
    Popovicheva, Olga B.
    Evangeliou, Nikolaos
    Kobelev, Vasilii O.
    Chichaeva, Marina A.
    Eleftheriadis, Konstantinos
    Gregoric, Asta
    Kasimov, Nikolay S.
    ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2022, 22 (09) : 5983 - 6000
  • [10] Source attribution of Arctic black carbon and sulfate aerosols and associated Arctic surface warming during 1980-2018
    Ren, Lili
    Yang, Yang
    Wang, Hailong
    Zhang, Rudong
    Wang, Pinya
    Liao, Hong
    ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2020, 20 (14) : 9067 - 9085