燃烧
生物质燃烧
环境科学
生物量(生态学)
碳纤维
吸收(声学)
大气科学
环境化学
温室气体
气象学
化学
材料科学
气溶胶
地质学
海洋学
物理
有机化学
复合数
复合材料
作者
Satish Basnet,Anni Hartikainen,Aki Virkkula,Pasi Yli‐Pirilä,Miika Kortelainen,Heikki Suhonen,Laura Kilpeläinen,Mika Ihalainen,Sampsa Väätäinen,Juho Louhisalmi,Markus Somero,Jarkko Tissari,Gert Jakobi,Ralf Zimmermann,Antti Kilpeläinen,Olli Sippula
标识
DOI:10.5194/acp-24-3197-2024
摘要
Abstract. Residential biomass combustion significantly contributes to light-absorbing carbonaceous aerosols in the atmosphere, impacting the earth's radiative balance at regional and global levels. This study investigates the contribution of brown carbon (BrC) to the total particulate light absorption in the wavelength range of 370–950 nm (BrC370–950) and the particulate absorption Ångström exponents (AAE470/950) in 15 different European residential combustion appliances using a variety of wood-based fuels. BrC370–950 was estimated to be from 1 % to 21 % for wood log stoves and 10 % for a fully automatized residential pellet boiler. Correlations between the ratio of organic to elemental carbon (OC / EC) and BrC370–950 indicated that a one-unit increase in OC / EC corresponded to approximately a 14 % increase in BrC370–950. Additionally, BrC370–950 was clearly influenced by the fuel moisture content and the combustion efficiency, while the effect of the combustion appliance type was less prominent. AAE470/950 of wood log combustion aerosols ranged from 1.06 to 1.61. By examining the correlation between AAE470/950 and OC / EC, an AAE470/950 close to unity was found for pure black carbon (BC) particles originating from residential wood combustion. This supports the common assumption used to differentiate light absorption caused by BC and BrC. Moreover, diesel aerosols exhibited an AAE470/950 of 1.02, with BrC contributing only 0.66 % to the total absorption, aligning with the assumption employed in source apportionment. These findings provide important data to assess the BrC from residential wood combustion with different emission characteristics and confirm that BrC can be a major contributor to particulate UV and near-UV light absorption for northern European wood stove emissions with relatively high OC / EC ratios.
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