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Comparison of Experimental and Modeled Absorption Enhancement by Black Carbon (BC) Cored Polydisperse Aerosols under Hygroscopic Conditions
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Citations
42
References
2012
Year
EngineeringChemical CompositionAbsorption SpectroscopyChemistryRayleigh ScatteringPolydisperse AerosolsChemical EngineeringHigh Temperature AerosolAtmospheric ScienceOptical DiagnosticsOptical PropertiesAbsorption CoefficientAerosol FormationShell ThicknessRadiative AbsorptionRadiation MeasurementOptical Particle SizingModeled Absorption EnhancementBlack CarbonCarbon BlackLight AbsorptionAir Pollution
The quantification of the radiative impacts of light absorbing ambient black carbon (BC) particles strongly depends on accurate measurements of BC mass concentration and absorption coefficient (β(abs)). In this study, an experiment has been conducted to quantify the influence of hygroscopic growth of ambient particles on light absorption. Using the hygroscopic growth factor (i.e., Zdanovskii-Stokes-Robinson (ZSR) approach), a model has been developed to predict the chemical composition of particles based on measurements, and the absorption and scattering coefficients are derived using a core-shell assumption with light extinction estimates based on Mie theory. The estimated optical properties agree within 7% for absorption coefficient and 30% for scattering coefficient with that of measured values. The enhancement of absorption is found to vary according to the thickness of the shell and BC mass, with a maximum of 2.3 for a shell thickness of 18 nm for the particles. The findings of this study underline the importance of considering aerosol-mixing states while calculating their radiative forcing.
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