Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (Aug 2023)

Concurrent photochemical whitening and darkening of ambient brown carbon

  • Q. Li,
  • D. Liu,
  • X. Jiang,
  • P. Tian,
  • Y. Wu,
  • S. Li,
  • K. Hu,
  • Q. Liu,
  • M. Huang,
  • R. Li,
  • K. Bi,
  • S. Kong,
  • D. Ding,
  • C. Yu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-23-9439-2023
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23
pp. 9439 – 9453

Abstract

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The light-absorbing organic aerosol (OA), known as brown carbon (BrC), has important radiative impacts; however, its sources and evolution after emission remain to be elucidated. In this study, the light absorption at multiple wavelengths, mass spectra of OA and microphysical properties of black carbon (BC) were characterized at a typical suburban environment in Beijing. The absorption of BC is constrained by its size distribution and mixing state, and the BrC absorption is obtained by subtracting the BC absorption from the total aerosol absorption. Aerosol absorption was further apportioned to BC, primary BrC and secondary BrC by applying the least correlation between secondary BrC and BC. The multilinear regression analysis on the factorized OA mass spectra indicated that the OA from traffic and biomass burning emission contributed to primary BrC. Importantly, the moderately oxygenated OA (O / C = 0.62) was revealed to highly correlate with secondary BrC. These OA had higher nitrogen content, in line with the nitrogen-containing functional groups detected by the Fourier transform infrared spectrometer. The photochemical processes were found to reduce the mass absorption cross section (MAC) of primary OA, reducing its contribution to total absorption by 20 %, at the same time increasing MAC for secondary OA, which showed a 30 % enhancement in contribution to total absorbance, implying the concurrent whitening and darkening of BrC. This provides field evidence that the photochemically produced secondary nitrogen-containing OA can considerably compensate for some bleaching effect on the primary BrC, hereby causing radiative impacts.