1 research outputs found
Quantifying the Light-Absorption Properties and Molecular Composition of Brown Carbon Aerosol from Sub-Saharan African Biomass Combustion
Sub-Saharan Africa is a hotspot for biomass burning (BB)-derived
carbonaceous aerosols, including light-absorbing organic (brown) carbon
(BrC). However, the chemically complex nature of BrC in BB aerosols
from this region is not fully understood. We generated smoke in a
chamber through smoldering combustion of common sub-Saharan African
biomass fuels (hardwoods, cow dung, savanna grass, and leaves). We
quantified aethalometer-based, real-time light-absorption properties
of BrC-containing organic-rich BB aerosols, accounting for variations
in wavelength, fuel type, relative humidity, and photochemical aging
conditions. In filter samples collected from the chamber and Botswana
in the winter, we identified 182 BrC species, classified into lignin
pyrolysis products, nitroaromatics, coumarins, stilbenes, and flavonoids.
Using an extensive set of standards, we determined species-specific
mass and emission factors. Our analysis revealed a linear relationship
between the combined BrC species contribution to chamber-measured
BB aerosol mass (0.4–14%) and the mass-absorption cross-section
at 370 nm (0.2–2.2 m2 g–1). Hierarchical
clustering resolved key molecular-level components from the BrC matrix,
with photochemically aged emissions from leaf and cow-dung burning
showing BrC fingerprints similar to those found in Botswana aerosols.
These quantitative findings could potentially help refine climate
model predictions, aid in source apportionment, and inform effective
air quality management policies for human health and the global climate