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Quantifying evolution of soot mixing state from transboundary transport of biomass burning emissions

Xiyao Chen, Chunxiang Ye, Yuanyuan Wang, Zhijun Wu, Tong Zhu, Fan Zhang, Xiaokun Ding, Zongbo Shi, Zhonghua Zheng, Weijun Li

2023iScience29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Incomplete combustion of fossil fuels and biomass burning emit large amounts of soot particles into the troposphere. The condensation process is considered to influence the size (D p ) and mixing state of soot particles, which affects their solar absorption efficiency and lifetimes. However, quantifying aging evolution of soot remains hampered in the real world because of complicated sources and observation technologies. In the Himalayas, we isolated soot sourced from transboundary transport of biomass burning and revealed soot aging mechanisms through microscopic observations. Most of coated soot particles stabilized one soot core under D p < 400 nm, but 34.8% of them contained multi-soot cores (n soot ≥ 2) and n soot increased 3–9 times with increasing D p . We established the soot mixing models to quantify transformation from condensation- to coagulation-dominant regime at D p ≈ 400 nm. Studies provide essential references for adopting mixing rules and quantifying the optical absorption of soot in atmospheric models.

Topics & Concepts

SootCombustionTroposphereMixing (physics)Biomass (ecology)Absorption (acoustics)CondensationCloud condensation nucleiMaterials scienceEnvironmental scienceChemistryEnvironmental chemistryAtmospheric sciencesAerosolMeteorologyGeologyOrganic chemistryPhysicsOceanographyQuantum mechanicsComposite materialAtmospheric chemistry and aerosolsAtmospheric Ozone and ClimateAtmospheric and Environmental Gas Dynamics
Quantifying evolution of soot mixing state from transboundary transport of biomass burning emissions | Litcius