Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (Jan 2010)

Black carbon over Mexico: the effect of atmospheric transport on mixing state, mass absorption cross-section, and BC/CO ratios

  • R. Subramanian,
  • G. L. Kok,
  • D. Baumgardner,
  • A. Clarke,
  • Y. Shinozuka,
  • T. L. Campos,
  • C. G. Heizer,
  • B. B. Stephens,
  • B. de Foy,
  • P. B. Voss,
  • R. A. Zaveri

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 219 – 237

Abstract

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A single particle soot photometer (SP2) was operated on the NCAR C-130 during the MIRAGE campaign (part of MILAGRO), sampling black carbon (BC) over Mexico. The highest BC concentrations were measured over Mexico City (sometimes as much as 2 μg/m<sup>3</sup>) and over hill-fires to the south of the city. The age of plumes outside of Mexico City was determined using a combination of HYSPLIT trajectories, WRF-FLEXPART modeling and CMET balloon tracks. As expected, older, diluted air masses had lower BC concentrations. A comparison of carbon monoxide (CO) and BC suggests a CO background of around 65 ppbv, and a background-corrected BC/CO<sub>net</sub> ratio of 2.89&plusmn;0.89 (ng/m<sup>3</sup>-STP)/ppbv (average &plusmn; standard deviation). This ratio is similar for fresh emissions over Mexico City, as well as for aged airmasses. Comparison of light absorption measured with a particle soot absorption photometer (PSAP) and the SP2 BC suggests a BC mass-normalized absorption cross-section (MAC) of 10.9&plusmn;2.1 m<sup>2</sup>/g at 660 nm (or 13.1 m<sup>2</sup>/g @ 550 nm, assuming MAC is inversely dependent on wavelength). This appears independent of aging and similar to the expected absorption cross-section for aged BC, but values, particularly in fresh emissions, could be biased high due to instrument artifacts. SP2-derived BC coating indicators show a prominent thinly-coated BC mode over the Mexico City Metropolitan Area (MCMA), while older air masses show both thinly-coated and thickly-coated BC. Some 2-day-old plumes do not show a prominent thickly-coated BC mode, possibly due to preferential wet scavenging of the likely-hydrophilic thickly-coated BC.