The impacts of aerosol loading, composition, and water uptake on aerosol extinction variability in the Baltimore–Washington, D.C. region
In order to utilize satellite-based aerosol measurements for the determination of air quality, the relationship between aerosol optical properties (wavelength-dependent, column-integrated extinction measured by satellites) and mass measurements of aerosol loading (PM<sub>2.5</sub> use...
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2016-01-01
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Article |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
A. J. Beyersdorf L. D. Ziemba G. Chen C. A. Corr C. A. Corr J. H. Crawford G. S. Diskin R. H. Moore K. L. Thornhill K. L. Thornhill E. L. Winstead E. L. Winstead B. E. Anderson |
spellingShingle |
A. J. Beyersdorf L. D. Ziemba G. Chen C. A. Corr C. A. Corr J. H. Crawford G. S. Diskin R. H. Moore K. L. Thornhill K. L. Thornhill E. L. Winstead E. L. Winstead B. E. Anderson The impacts of aerosol loading, composition, and water uptake on aerosol extinction variability in the Baltimore–Washington, D.C. region Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics |
author_facet |
A. J. Beyersdorf L. D. Ziemba G. Chen C. A. Corr C. A. Corr J. H. Crawford G. S. Diskin R. H. Moore K. L. Thornhill K. L. Thornhill E. L. Winstead E. L. Winstead B. E. Anderson |
author_sort |
A. J. Beyersdorf |
title |
The impacts of aerosol loading, composition, and water uptake on aerosol extinction variability in the Baltimore–Washington, D.C. region |
title_short |
The impacts of aerosol loading, composition, and water uptake on aerosol extinction variability in the Baltimore–Washington, D.C. region |
title_full |
The impacts of aerosol loading, composition, and water uptake on aerosol extinction variability in the Baltimore–Washington, D.C. region |
title_fullStr |
The impacts of aerosol loading, composition, and water uptake on aerosol extinction variability in the Baltimore–Washington, D.C. region |
title_full_unstemmed |
The impacts of aerosol loading, composition, and water uptake on aerosol extinction variability in the Baltimore–Washington, D.C. region |
title_sort |
impacts of aerosol loading, composition, and water uptake on aerosol extinction variability in the baltimore–washington, d.c. region |
publisher |
Copernicus Publications |
series |
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics |
issn |
1680-7316 1680-7324 |
publishDate |
2016-01-01 |
description |
In order to utilize satellite-based aerosol measurements for the
determination of air quality, the relationship between aerosol optical
properties (wavelength-dependent, column-integrated extinction measured by
satellites) and mass measurements of aerosol loading (PM<sub>2.5</sub> used for air
quality monitoring) must be understood. This connection varies with many
factors including those specific to the aerosol type – such as composition,
size, and hygroscopicity – and to the surrounding atmosphere, such as
temperature, relative humidity (RH), and altitude, all of which can vary
spatially and temporally. During the DISCOVER-AQ (Deriving Information on
Surface conditions from Column and Vertically Resolved Observations Relevant
to Air Quality) project, extensive in situ atmospheric profiling in the
Baltimore, MD–Washington, D.C. region was performed during 14
flights in July 2011. Identical flight plans and profile locations throughout
the project provide meaningful statistics for determining the variability in
and correlations between aerosol loading, composition, optical properties, and
meteorological conditions.<br><br>
Measured water-soluble aerosol mass was composed primarily of ammonium
sulfate (campaign average of 32 %) and organics (57 %). A distinct
difference in composition was observed, with high-loading days having a
proportionally larger percentage of sulfate due to transport from the Ohio
River Valley. This composition shift caused a change in the aerosol
water-uptake potential (hygroscopicity) such that higher relative
contributions of inorganics increased the bulk aerosol hygroscopicity. These
days also tended to have higher relative humidity, causing an increase in the
water content of the aerosol. Conversely, low-aerosol-loading days had lower
sulfate and higher black carbon contributions, causing lower single-scattering
albedos (SSAs). The average black carbon concentrations were
240 ng m<sup>−3</sup> in the lowest 1 km, decreasing to 35 ng m<sup>−3</sup> in the
free troposphere (above 3 km).<br><br>
Routine airborne sampling over six locations was used to evaluate the
relative contributions of aerosol loading, composition, and relative humidity
(the amount of water available for uptake onto aerosols) to variability in
mixed-layer aerosol extinction. Aerosol loading (dry extinction) was found to
be the predominant source, accounting for 88 % on average of the measured
spatial variability in ambient extinction, with lesser contributions from
variability in relative humidity (10 %) and aerosol composition
(1.3 %). On average, changes in aerosol loading also caused 82 % of
the diurnal variability in ambient aerosol extinction. However on days with
relative humidity above 60 %, variability in RH was found to cause up to
62 % of the spatial variability and 95 % of the diurnal variability
in ambient extinction.<br><br>
This work shows that extinction is driven to first order by aerosol mass
loadings; however, humidity-driven hydration effects play an important
secondary role. This motivates combined satellite–modeling assimilation
products that are able to capture these components of the aerosol optical depth (AOD)–PM<sub>2.5</sub>
link. Conversely, aerosol hygroscopicity and SSA play a minor role in driving
variations both spatially and throughout the day in aerosol extinction and
therefore AOD. However, changes in aerosol hygroscopicity from day to day
were large and could cause a bias of up to 27 % if not accounted for.
Thus it appears that a single daily measurement of aerosol hygroscopicity can
be used for AOD-to-PM<sub>2.5</sub> conversions over the study region (on the order
of 1400 km<sup>2</sup>). This is complimentary to the results of Chu et
al. (2015), who determined that the aerosol vertical distribution from "a single lidar is
feasible to cover the range of 100 km" in the same region. |
url |
https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/16/1003/2016/acp-16-1003-2016.pdf |
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doaj-0a2739d262dc4483ac0643b3455e96ce2020-11-25T01:43:08ZengCopernicus PublicationsAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics1680-73161680-73242016-01-01161003101510.5194/acp-16-1003-2016The impacts of aerosol loading, composition, and water uptake on aerosol extinction variability in the Baltimore–Washington, D.C. regionA. J. Beyersdorf0L. D. Ziemba1G. Chen2C. A. Corr3C. A. Corr4J. H. Crawford5G. S. Diskin6R. H. Moore7K. L. Thornhill8K. L. Thornhill9E. L. Winstead10E. L. Winstead11B. E. Anderson12NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia, USANASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia, USANASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia, USANASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia, USAOak Ridge Associated Universities, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, USANASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia, USANASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia, USANASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia, USANASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia, USAScience Systems and Applications, Inc., Hampton, Virginia, USANASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia, USAScience Systems and Applications, Inc., Hampton, Virginia, USANASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia, USAIn order to utilize satellite-based aerosol measurements for the determination of air quality, the relationship between aerosol optical properties (wavelength-dependent, column-integrated extinction measured by satellites) and mass measurements of aerosol loading (PM<sub>2.5</sub> used for air quality monitoring) must be understood. This connection varies with many factors including those specific to the aerosol type – such as composition, size, and hygroscopicity – and to the surrounding atmosphere, such as temperature, relative humidity (RH), and altitude, all of which can vary spatially and temporally. During the DISCOVER-AQ (Deriving Information on Surface conditions from Column and Vertically Resolved Observations Relevant to Air Quality) project, extensive in situ atmospheric profiling in the Baltimore, MD–Washington, D.C. region was performed during 14 flights in July 2011. Identical flight plans and profile locations throughout the project provide meaningful statistics for determining the variability in and correlations between aerosol loading, composition, optical properties, and meteorological conditions.<br><br> Measured water-soluble aerosol mass was composed primarily of ammonium sulfate (campaign average of 32 %) and organics (57 %). A distinct difference in composition was observed, with high-loading days having a proportionally larger percentage of sulfate due to transport from the Ohio River Valley. This composition shift caused a change in the aerosol water-uptake potential (hygroscopicity) such that higher relative contributions of inorganics increased the bulk aerosol hygroscopicity. These days also tended to have higher relative humidity, causing an increase in the water content of the aerosol. Conversely, low-aerosol-loading days had lower sulfate and higher black carbon contributions, causing lower single-scattering albedos (SSAs). The average black carbon concentrations were 240 ng m<sup>−3</sup> in the lowest 1 km, decreasing to 35 ng m<sup>−3</sup> in the free troposphere (above 3 km).<br><br> Routine airborne sampling over six locations was used to evaluate the relative contributions of aerosol loading, composition, and relative humidity (the amount of water available for uptake onto aerosols) to variability in mixed-layer aerosol extinction. Aerosol loading (dry extinction) was found to be the predominant source, accounting for 88 % on average of the measured spatial variability in ambient extinction, with lesser contributions from variability in relative humidity (10 %) and aerosol composition (1.3 %). On average, changes in aerosol loading also caused 82 % of the diurnal variability in ambient aerosol extinction. However on days with relative humidity above 60 %, variability in RH was found to cause up to 62 % of the spatial variability and 95 % of the diurnal variability in ambient extinction.<br><br> This work shows that extinction is driven to first order by aerosol mass loadings; however, humidity-driven hydration effects play an important secondary role. This motivates combined satellite–modeling assimilation products that are able to capture these components of the aerosol optical depth (AOD)–PM<sub>2.5</sub> link. Conversely, aerosol hygroscopicity and SSA play a minor role in driving variations both spatially and throughout the day in aerosol extinction and therefore AOD. However, changes in aerosol hygroscopicity from day to day were large and could cause a bias of up to 27 % if not accounted for. Thus it appears that a single daily measurement of aerosol hygroscopicity can be used for AOD-to-PM<sub>2.5</sub> conversions over the study region (on the order of 1400 km<sup>2</sup>). This is complimentary to the results of Chu et al. (2015), who determined that the aerosol vertical distribution from "a single lidar is feasible to cover the range of 100 km" in the same region.https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/16/1003/2016/acp-16-1003-2016.pdf |