Issue 7, 2011

Characterization of ambient black carbon and wood burning particles in two urban areas

Abstract

Previously it has been suggested that certain organic aerosol components of wood smoke have enhanced ultraviolet absorption at 370 nm relative to 880 nm in two-wavelength aethalometer measurements. This enhanced absorption could serve as an indicator of wood burning particles. Two-wavelength (370 nm and 880 nm) aethalometer measurements were made at urban sites in Rochester, New York and Laredo, Texas from August 1 to December 31, 2009 and from December 23, 2007 to January 2, 2008, respectively. In Rochester, Delta-C (UVBC370nm − BC880nm) values were higher by a factor of 3 during the night than during the day in November and December when residential wood burning was common. In Laredo, particularly high Delta-C values were observed on Christmas Eve and New Year's Eve and were attributed to biomass burning and firework emissions. Exponential decay was found to be a good estimator for predicting BC concentrations at different wind speeds regardless of wind directions.

Graphical abstract: Characterization of ambient black carbon and wood burning particles in two urban areas

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
07 Feb 2011
Accepted
26 Apr 2011
First published
23 May 2011

J. Environ. Monit., 2011,13, 1919-1926

Characterization of ambient black carbon and wood burning particles in two urban areas

Y. Wang, P. K. Hopke, O. V. Rattigan and Y. Zhu, J. Environ. Monit., 2011, 13, 1919 DOI: 10.1039/C1EM10117J

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