The large proportion of black carbon (BC)-containing aerosols in the urban atmosphere
2020
Abstract The accurate derivation of the proportion and absorption enhancement of black carbon (BC)-containing aerosols in the atmosphere is critical to assess their effect on air quality and climate. Here, using the field measured size-resolved volatility shrink factor, BC bulk mass concentration and the BC mass fraction in BC-containing particles in winter Beijing, we retrieved and quantified both the number and mass concentration of (1) non-BC, (2) internally mixed BC and (3) externally mixed BC of ambient fine aerosol particles. The reliability of the retrieval method has been evaluated by comparing with the simultaneously measured data. The number fraction of BC-containing particles accounts for 60–78% of ambient fine particles, with internally (both BC core and coating materials) and externally mixed BC of 51–64% and 9–23%, respectively. Only for nucleated particles on clean days, when nucleation is a major source of aerosol particles, did the non-BC component dominate (54%). A large amount of aerosols are BC-containing particles, with mass fraction of 32–52%, suggesting the dominant role of BC in elevating mass concentration of particulate matter (PM) in a polluted urban area. We also show that the BC particles are thickly coated with coating thickness (characterized by Dp/Dc, ratio of the BC diameter before and after heating at 300 °C) of 1.6–2.2, implying efficient aging of BC particles in polluted urban area. Our results imply a large proportion of BC-containing particles in the atmosphere, which could help towards understanding the role of BC on regional haze formation and climate forcing.
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