Effect of ambient humidity on the light absorption amplification of black carbon in Beijing during January 2013

  • Yunfei Wu
  • , Renjian Zhang
  • , Ping Tian
  • , Jun Tao
  • , S. C. Hsu
  • , Peng Yan
  • , Qiyuan Wang
  • , Junji Cao
  • , Xiaoling Zhang
  • , Xiangao Xia

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

74 Scopus citations

Abstract

Black carbon (BC) and its mixing state were measured with a ground-based single particle soot photometer in urban Beijing during the extremely polluted winter of 2013. Up to 70 ± 14% of the BC-containing particles were thickly-coated during periods of haze, compared to 37 ± 9% on non-hazy days. The thickly-coated number fraction (NFBC-thick) increased with increasing BC, reaching a plateau at ~80-90% when BC concentrations were ≥15 μg m-3 and visibility was ≤2 km. Regional inflows brought more aged, highly thickly-coated BC to Beijing during haze. The absorption coefficient showed a distinct linear correlation with BC concentration; the mass absorption efficiency (MAE) of BC was acquired, with an overall mean of 4.2 ± 0.01 m2 g-1 at 870 nm. The MAE of BC amplified with increasing ambient relative humidity. This was largely explained by the increase in NFBC-thick, which was likely due to the enhanced production of secondary aerosol under humid conditions.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)217-223
Number of pages7
JournalAtmospheric Environment
Volume124
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2016

Keywords

  • Ambient humidity
  • Black carbon
  • Haze
  • Light absorption

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