Atmospheric Measurement Techniques (May 2022)

Observation of bioaerosol transport using wideband integrated bioaerosol sensor and coherent Doppler lidar

  • D. Tang,
  • T. Wei,
  • J. Yuan,
  • H. Xia,
  • H. Xia,
  • H. Xia,
  • X. Dou,
  • X. Dou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-15-2819-2022
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15
pp. 2819 – 2838

Abstract

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Bioaerosols are usually defined as aerosols arising from biological systems such as bacteria, fungi, and viruses. They play an important role in atmospheric physical and chemical processes including ice nucleation and cloud condensation. As such, their dispersion affects not only public health but also regional climate. Lidar is an effective technique for aerosol detection and pollution monitoring. It is also used to profile the vertical distribution of wind vectors. In this paper, a coherent Doppler wind lidar (CDWL) is deployed for aerosol and wind detection in Hefei, China, from 11 to 20 March in 2020. A wideband integrated bioaerosol sensor (WIBS) is used to monitor variations in local fluorescent bioaerosols. Three aerosol transport events are captured. The WIBS data show that, during these transport events, several types of fluorescent aerosol particles exhibit abnormal increases in their concentration, number fractions to total particles, and number fractions to whole fluorescent aerosols. These increases are attributed to external fluorescent bioaerosols instead of local bioaerosols. Based on the HYbrid Single-Particle Lagrangian Integrated Trajectory (HYSPLIT) backward trajectory model and the characteristics of external aerosols in WIBS, their possible sources, transport paths, and components are discussed. The results prove the influence of external aerosol transport on local high particulate matter (PM) pollution and fluorescent aerosol particle composition. The combination of WIBS and CDWL expands the aerosol monitoring parameters and provides a potential method for real-time monitoring of fluorescent biological aerosol transport events. In addition, it also helps to understand the relationships between atmospheric phenomena at high altitudes like virga and the variation of surface bioaerosol. It contributes to the further understanding of long-range bioaerosol transport, the roles of bioaerosols in atmospheric processes, and in aerosol–cloud–precipitation interactions.