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Secondary aerosol formation during the dark oxidation of residential biomass burning emissions

Particulate matter from biomass burning emissions affects air quality, ecosystems and climate; however, quantifying these effects requires that the connection between primary emissions and secondary aerosol production is firmly established. We performed atmospheric simulation chamber experiments on...

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Autores principales: Kodros, John K., Kaltsonoudis, Christos, Paglione, Marco, Florou, Kalliopi, Jorga, Spiro, Vasilakopoulou, Christina, Cirtog, Manuela, Cazaunau, Mathieu, Picquet-Varrault, Bénédicte, Nenes, Athanasios, Pandis, Spyros N.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: RSC 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9476557/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36277744
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2ea00031h
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author Kodros, John K.
Kaltsonoudis, Christos
Paglione, Marco
Florou, Kalliopi
Jorga, Spiro
Vasilakopoulou, Christina
Cirtog, Manuela
Cazaunau, Mathieu
Picquet-Varrault, Bénédicte
Nenes, Athanasios
Pandis, Spyros N.
author_facet Kodros, John K.
Kaltsonoudis, Christos
Paglione, Marco
Florou, Kalliopi
Jorga, Spiro
Vasilakopoulou, Christina
Cirtog, Manuela
Cazaunau, Mathieu
Picquet-Varrault, Bénédicte
Nenes, Athanasios
Pandis, Spyros N.
author_sort Kodros, John K.
collection PubMed
description Particulate matter from biomass burning emissions affects air quality, ecosystems and climate; however, quantifying these effects requires that the connection between primary emissions and secondary aerosol production is firmly established. We performed atmospheric simulation chamber experiments on the chemical oxidation of residential biomass burning emissions under dark conditions. Biomass burning organic aerosol was found to age under dark conditions, with its oxygen-to-carbon ratio increasing by 7–34% and producing 1–38 μg m(−3) of secondary organic aerosol (5–80% increase over the fresh organic aerosol) after 30 min of exposure to NO(3) radicals in the chamber (corresponding to 1–3 h of exposure to typical nighttime NO(3) radical concentrations in an urban environment). The average mass concentration of SOA formed under dark-oxidation conditions was comparable to the mass concentration formed after 3 h (equivalent to 7–10 h of ambient exposure) under ultraviolet lights (6 μg m(−3) or a 47% increase over the emitted organic aerosol concentration). The dark-aging experiments showed a substantial increase in secondary nitrate aerosol (0.12–3.8 μg m(−3)), 46–100% of which is in the form of organic nitrates. The biomass burning aerosol pH remained practically constant at 2.8 throughout the experiment. This value promotes inorganic nitrate partitioning to the particulate phase, potentially contributing to the buildup of nitrate aerosol in the boundary layer and enhancing long-range transport. These results suggest that oxidation through reactions with the NO(3) radical is an additional secondary aerosol formation pathway in biomass burning emission plumes that should be accounted for in atmospheric chemical-transport models.
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spelling pubmed-94765572022-10-20 Secondary aerosol formation during the dark oxidation of residential biomass burning emissions Kodros, John K. Kaltsonoudis, Christos Paglione, Marco Florou, Kalliopi Jorga, Spiro Vasilakopoulou, Christina Cirtog, Manuela Cazaunau, Mathieu Picquet-Varrault, Bénédicte Nenes, Athanasios Pandis, Spyros N. Environ Sci Atmos Chemistry Particulate matter from biomass burning emissions affects air quality, ecosystems and climate; however, quantifying these effects requires that the connection between primary emissions and secondary aerosol production is firmly established. We performed atmospheric simulation chamber experiments on the chemical oxidation of residential biomass burning emissions under dark conditions. Biomass burning organic aerosol was found to age under dark conditions, with its oxygen-to-carbon ratio increasing by 7–34% and producing 1–38 μg m(−3) of secondary organic aerosol (5–80% increase over the fresh organic aerosol) after 30 min of exposure to NO(3) radicals in the chamber (corresponding to 1–3 h of exposure to typical nighttime NO(3) radical concentrations in an urban environment). The average mass concentration of SOA formed under dark-oxidation conditions was comparable to the mass concentration formed after 3 h (equivalent to 7–10 h of ambient exposure) under ultraviolet lights (6 μg m(−3) or a 47% increase over the emitted organic aerosol concentration). The dark-aging experiments showed a substantial increase in secondary nitrate aerosol (0.12–3.8 μg m(−3)), 46–100% of which is in the form of organic nitrates. The biomass burning aerosol pH remained practically constant at 2.8 throughout the experiment. This value promotes inorganic nitrate partitioning to the particulate phase, potentially contributing to the buildup of nitrate aerosol in the boundary layer and enhancing long-range transport. These results suggest that oxidation through reactions with the NO(3) radical is an additional secondary aerosol formation pathway in biomass burning emission plumes that should be accounted for in atmospheric chemical-transport models. RSC 2022-08-23 /pmc/articles/PMC9476557/ /pubmed/36277744 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2ea00031h Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Kodros, John K.
Kaltsonoudis, Christos
Paglione, Marco
Florou, Kalliopi
Jorga, Spiro
Vasilakopoulou, Christina
Cirtog, Manuela
Cazaunau, Mathieu
Picquet-Varrault, Bénédicte
Nenes, Athanasios
Pandis, Spyros N.
Secondary aerosol formation during the dark oxidation of residential biomass burning emissions
title Secondary aerosol formation during the dark oxidation of residential biomass burning emissions
title_full Secondary aerosol formation during the dark oxidation of residential biomass burning emissions
title_fullStr Secondary aerosol formation during the dark oxidation of residential biomass burning emissions
title_full_unstemmed Secondary aerosol formation during the dark oxidation of residential biomass burning emissions
title_short Secondary aerosol formation during the dark oxidation of residential biomass burning emissions
title_sort secondary aerosol formation during the dark oxidation of residential biomass burning emissions
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9476557/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36277744
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2ea00031h
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