EGU2020-7382
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-7382
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2023. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

The oxidizing power of the dark side: Rapid nocturnal aging of biomass burning as an overlooked source of oxidized organic aerosol

John Kodros1, Dimitris Papanastasiou2, Marco Paglione3, Mauro Masiol1, Stefania Squizzato1, Kalliopi Florou1, Agata Kołodziejczyk4, Ksakousti Skyllakou1, Athanasios Nenes1,5, and Spyros Pandis1,6
John Kodros et al.
  • 1Foundation for Research and Technology Hellas, Institute for Chemical Engineering Sciences, Patras, Greece (jkodros@iceht.forth.gr)
  • 2Buffalo Research Laboratory, Honeywell International Inc.
  • 3National Research Council, Institute of Atmospheric Sciences and Climate (CNR-ISAC), Bologna, Italy
  • 4Institute of Physical Chemistry, Polish Academy of Science, Warsaw, Poland
  • 5Laboratory of Atmospheric Processes and their Impacts, School of Architecture, Civil & Environmental Engineering, École Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne, Lausanne, 1015, Switzerland
  • 6Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Patras, Patra, Greece

Oxidized organic aerosol (OOA) is a major component of ambient particulate matter, substantially affecting both climate and human health. A considerable body of evidence has established that OOA is readily produced in the presence of daylight, thus leading to the association of high concentrations of OOA in the summer or mid-afternoon. However, this current mechanistic understanding fails to explain elevated OOA concentrations during night or wintertime periods of low photochemical activity, thus leading atmospheric models to under predict OOA concentrations by a factor of 3-5. Here we show that fresh emissions from biomass burning rapidly forms OOA in the laboratory over a few hours and without any sunlight. The resulting OOA chemical composition is consistent with the observed OOA in field studies in major urban areas. To estimate the contribution of nocturnally aged OOA in the ambient atmosphere, we incorporate this nighttime-aging mechanism into a chemical-transport model and find that over much of the United States greater than 75% of the OOA formed from fresh biomass burning emissions underwent nighttime aging processes. Thus, the conceptual framework that OOA is predominantly formed in the presence of daylight fails to account for a substantial and rapid oxidation process occurring in the dark.

How to cite: Kodros, J., Papanastasiou, D., Paglione, M., Masiol, M., Squizzato, S., Florou, K., Kołodziejczyk, A., Skyllakou, K., Nenes, A., and Pandis, S.: The oxidizing power of the dark side: Rapid nocturnal aging of biomass burning as an overlooked source of oxidized organic aerosol, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-7382, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-7382, 2020.

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