Evolution of organic carbon in the laboratory oxidation of biomass-burning emissions

Abstract Biomass burning (BB) is a major source of reactive organic carbon into the atmosphere. Once in the atmosphere, these organic BB emissions, in both the gas and particle phases, are subject to atmospheric oxidation, though the nature and impact of the chemical transformations are not currently well constrained. Here we describe experiments carried out as part of the FIREX FireLab campaign, in which smoke from the combustion of fuels typical of the western United States was sampled into an environmental chamber and exposed to high concentrations of OH, to simulate the equivalent of up to 2 d of atmospheric oxidation. The evolution of the organic mixture was monitored using three real-time time-of-flight mass spectrometric instruments (a proton transfer reaction mass spectrometer, an iodide chemical ionization mass spectrometer, and an aerosol mass spectrometer), providing measurements of both individual species and ensemble properties of the mixture. The combined measurements from these instruments achieve a reasonable degree of carbon closure (within 15 %–35 %), indicating that most of the reactive organic carbon is measured by these instruments. Consistent with our previous studies of the oxidation of individual organic species, atmospheric oxidation of the complex organic mixture leads to the formation of species that on average are smaller and more oxidized than those in the unoxidized emissions. In addition, the comparison of mass spectra from the different fuels indicates that the oxidative evolution of BB emissions proceeds largely independent of fuel type, with different fresh smoke mixtures ultimately converging into a common, aged distribution of gas-phase compounds. This distribution is characterized by high concentrations of several small, volatile oxygenates, formed from fragmentation reactions, as well as a complex pool of many minor oxidized species and secondary organic aerosol, likely formed via functionalization processes.

Location
Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Frankfurt am Main
Extent
Online-Ressource
Language
Englisch

Bibliographic citation
Evolution of organic carbon in the laboratory oxidation of biomass-burning emissions ; volume:23 ; number:14 ; year:2023 ; pages:7887-7899 ; extent:13
Atmospheric chemistry and physics ; 23, Heft 14 (2023), 7887-7899 (gesamt 13)

Creator
Nihill, Kevin J.
Coggon, Matthew M.
Lim, Christopher Y.
Koss, Abigail R.
Yuan, Bin
Krechmer, Jordan
Sekimoto, Kanako
Jimenez, Jose L.
de Gouw, Joost
Cappa, Christopher D.
Heald, Colette
Warneke, Carsten
Kroll, Jesse H.

DOI
10.5194/acp-23-7887-2023
URN
urn:nbn:de:101:1-2023072004262822150510
Rights
Open Access; Der Zugriff auf das Objekt ist unbeschränkt möglich.
Last update
18.02.2025, 4:35 AM CET

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