Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (Nov 2024)

Technical note: High-resolution analyses of concentrations and sizes of refractory black carbon particles deposited in northwestern Greenland over the past 350 years – Part 1: Continuous flow analysis of the SIGMA-D ice core using the wide-range Single-Particle Soot Photometer and a high-efficiency nebulizer

  • K. Goto-Azuma,
  • K. Goto-Azuma,
  • R. Dallmayr,
  • R. Dallmayr,
  • Y. Ogawa-Tsukagawa,
  • N. Moteki,
  • T. Mori,
  • S. Ohata,
  • Y. Kondo,
  • M. Koike,
  • M. Hirabayashi,
  • J. Ogata,
  • K. Kitamura,
  • K. Kawamura,
  • K. Kawamura,
  • K. Fujita,
  • S. Matoba,
  • N. Nagatsuka,
  • N. Nagatsuka,
  • A. Tsushima,
  • A. Tsushima,
  • K. Fukuda,
  • T. Aoki

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-24-12985-2024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24
pp. 12985 – 13000

Abstract

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Ice cores can provide long-term records of refractory black carbon (rBC), an important aerosol species closely linked to the climate and environment. However, previous studies of ice cores only analyzed rBC particles with a diameter of < 500 nm, which could have led to an underestimation of rBC mass concentrations. Information on the size distribution of rBC particles is very limited, and there are no Arctic ice core records of the temporal variation in rBC size distribution. In this study, we applied a recently developed improved technique to analyze the rBC concentration in an ice core drilled at the SIGMA-D site in northwestern Greenland. The improved technique, which uses the modified Single-Particle Soot Photometer (SP2) and a high-efficiency nebulizer, widens the measurable range of rBC particle size. For high-resolution continuous analyses of ice cores, we developed a continuous flow analysis (CFA) system. Coupling of the improved rBC measurement technique with the CFA system allows accurate high-resolution measurements of the size distribution and concentration of rBC particles with a diameter between 70 nm and 4 µm, with minimal particle losses. Using this technique, we reconstructed the size distributions and the number and mass concentrations of rBC particles during the past 350 years. On the basis of the size distributions, we assessed the underestimation of rBC mass concentrations measured using the conventional SP2s. For the period 2003–2013, the underestimation of the average mass concentration would have been 12 %–31 % for the SIGMA-D core.