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Intercomparison and characterization of 23 Aethalometers under laboratory and ambient air conditions: procedures and unit-to-unit variabilities

2021, Cuesta-Mosquera, Andrea, Močnik, GriÅ”a, Drinovec, Luka, MĆ¼ller, Thomas, Pfeifer, Sascha, MinguillĆ³n, MarĆ­a Cruz, Briel, Bjƶrn, Buckley, Paul, Dudoitis, Vadimas, FernĆ”ndez-GarcĆ­a, Javier, FernĆ”ndez-Amado, MarĆ­a, Ferreira De Brito, Joel, Riffault, Veronique, Flentje, Harald, Heffernan, Eimear, Kalivitis, Nikolaos, Kalogridis, Athina-Cerise, Keernik, Hannes, Marmureanu, Luminita, Luoma, Krista, Marinoni, Angela, Pikridas, Michael, Schauer, Gerhard, Serfozo, Norbert, Servomaa, Henri, Titos, Gloria, Yus-DĆ­ez, JesĆŗs, Zioła, Natalia, Wiedensohler, Alfred

Aerosolized black carbon is monitored worldwide to quantify its impact on air quality and climate. Given its importance, measurements of black carbon mass concentrations must be conducted with instruments operating in qualitychecked and ensured conditions to generate data which are reliable and comparable temporally and geographically. In this study, we report the results from the largest characterization and intercomparison of filter-based absorption photometers, the Aethalometer model AE33, belonging to several European monitoring networks. Under controlled laboratory conditions, a total of 23 instruments measured mass concentrations of black carbon from three wellcharacterized aerosol sources: synthetic soot, nigrosin particles, and ambient air from the urban background of Leipzig, Germany. The objective was to investigate the individual performance of the instruments and their comparability; we analyzed the response of the instruments to the different aerosol sources and the impact caused by the use of obsolete filter materials and the application of maintenance activities. Differences in the instrument-to-instrument variabilities from equivalent black carbon (eBC) concentrations reported at 880 nm were determined before maintenance activities (for soot measurements, average deviation from total least square regression was-2.0% and the range-16% to 7 %; for nigrosin measurements, average deviation was 0.4% and the range-15% to 17 %), and after they were carried out (for soot measurements, average deviation was-1.0% and the range-14% to 8 %; for nigrosin measurements, the average deviation was 0.5%and the range-12%to 15 %). The deviations are in most of the cases explained by the type of filter material employed by the instruments, the total particle load on the filter, and the flow calibration. The results of this intercomparison activity show that relatively small unit-to-unit variability of AE33-based particle light absorbing measurements is possible with wellmaintained instruments. It is crucial to follow the guidelines for maintenance activities and the use of the proper filter tape in the AE33 to ensure high quality and comparable black carbon (BC) measurements among international observational networks. Ā© 2021 Author(s). This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

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The second ACTRIS inter-comparison (2016) for Aerosol Chemical Speciation Monitors (ACSM): Calibration protocols and instrument performance evaluations

2019, Freney, Evelyn, Zhang, Yunjiang, Croteau, Philip, Amodeo, Tanguy, Williams, Leah, Truong, FranƧois, Petit, Jean-Eudes, Sciare, Jean, Sarda-Esteve, Roland, Bonnaire, Nicolas, Arumae, Tarvo, Aurela, Minna, Bougiatioti, Aikaterini, Mihalopoulos, Nikolaos, Coz, Esther, Artinano, BegoƱa, Crenn, Vincent, Elste, Thomas, Heikkinen, Liine, Poulain, Laurent, Wiedensohler, Alfred, Herrmann, Hartmut, Priestman, Max, Alastuey, Andres, Stavroulas, Iasonas, Tobler, Anna, Vasilescu, Jeni, Zanca, Nicola, Canagaratna, Manjula, Carbone, Claudio, Flentje, Harald, Green, David, Maasikmets, Marek, Marmureanu, Luminita, Cruz Minguillon, Maria, Prevot, Andre S.H., Gros, Valerie, Jayne, John, Favez, Olivier

This work describes results obtained from the 2016 Aerosol Chemical Speciation Monitor (ACSM) intercomparison exercise performed at the Aerosol Chemical Monitor Calibration Center (ACMCC, France). Fifteen quadrupole ACSMs (Q_ACSM) from the European Research Infrastructure for the observation of Aerosols, Clouds and Trace gases (ACTRIS) network were calibrated using a new procedure that acquires calibration data under the same operating conditions as those used during sampling and hence gets information representative of instrument performance. The new calibration procedure notably resulted in a decrease in the spread of the measured sulfate mass concentrations, improving the reproducibility of inorganic species measurements between ACSMs as well as the consistency with co-located independent instruments. Tested calibration procedures also allowed for the investigation of artifacts in individual instruments, such as the overestimation of m/z 44 from organic aerosol. This effect was quantified by the m/z (mass-to-charge) 44 to nitrate ratio measured during ammonium nitrate calibrations, with values ranging from 0.03 to 0.26, showing that it can be significant for some instruments. The fragmentation table correction previously proposed to account for this artifact was applied to the measurements acquired during this study. For some instruments (those with high artifacts), this fragmentation table adjustment led to an ā€œovercorrectionā€ of the f44 (m/z 44/Org) signal. This correction based on measurements made with pure NH4NO3, assumes that the magnitude of the artifact is independent of chemical composition. Using data acquired at different NH4NO3 mixing ratios (from solutions of NH4NO3 and (NH4)2SO4) we observe that the magnitude of the artifact varies as a function of composition. Here we applied an updated correction, dependent on the ambient NO3 mass fraction, which resulted in an improved agreement in organic signal among instruments. This work illustrates the benefits of integrating new calibration procedures and artifact corrections, but also highlights the benefits of these intercomparison exercises to continue to improve our knowledge of how these instruments operate, and assist us in interpreting atmospheric chemistry. Ā© 2019, Ā© 2019 Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

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Measuring the morphology and density of internally mixed black carbon with SP2 and VTDMA: New insight into the absorption enhancement of black carbon in the atmosphere

2016, Zhang, Yuxuan, Zhang, Qiang, Cheng, Yafang, Su, Hang, Kecorius, Simonas, Wang, Zhibin, Wu, Zhijun, Hu, Min, Zhu, Tong, Wiedensohler, Alfred, He, Kebin

The morphology and density of black carbon (BC) cores in internally mixed BC (In-BC) particles affect their mixing state and absorption enhancement. In this work, we developed a new method to measure the morphology and effective density of the BC cores of ambient In-BC particles using a single-particle soot photometer (SP2) and a volatility tandem differential mobility analyzer (VTDMA) during the CAREBeijing-2013 campaign from 8 to 27 July 2013 at Xianghe Observatory. This new measurement system can select size-resolved ambient In-BC particles and measure the mobility diameter and mass of the In-BC cores. The morphology and effective density of the ambient In-BC cores are then calculated. For the In-BC cores in the atmosphere, changes in their dynamic shape factor (Ļ‡) and effective density (Ļeff) can be characterized as a function of the aging process (Dpāˆ•Dc) measured by SP2 and VTDMA. During an intensive field study, the ambient In-BC cores had an average shape factor Ļ‡ of ā€‰āˆ¼ā€Æ1.2 and an average density of ā€‰āˆ¼ā€Æ1.2ā€Ægā€Æcmāˆ’3, indicating that ambient In-BC cores have a near-spherical shape with an internal void of ā€‰āˆ¼ā€Æ30ā€Æ%. From the measured morphology and density, the average shellā€Æāˆ•ā€Æcore ratio and absorption enhancement (Eab) of ambient BC were estimated to be 2.1ā€“2.7 and 1.6ā€“1.9, respectively, for In-BC particles with sizes of 200ā€“350ā€Ænm. When the In-BC cores were assumed to have a void-free BC sphere with a density of 1.8ā€Ægā€Æcmāˆ’3, the shellā€Æāˆ•ā€Æcore ratio and Eab were overestimated by ā€‰āˆ¼ā€Æ13 and ā€‰āˆ¼ā€Æ17ā€Æ%, respectively. The new approach developed in this work improves the calculations of the mixing state and optical properties of ambient In-BC particles by quantifying the changes in the morphology and density of ambient In-BC cores during aging.

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Role of the dew water on the ground surface in HONO distribution: A case measurement in Melpitz

2020, Ren, Yangang, Stieger, Bastian, Spindler, Gerald, Grosselin, Benoit, Mellouki, Abdelwahid, Tuch, Thomas, Wiedensohler, Alfred, Herrmann, Hartmut

To characterize the role of dew water for the ground surface HONO distribution, nitrous acid (HONO) measurements with a Monitor for AeRosols and Gases in ambient Air (MARGA) and a LOng Path Absorption Photometer (LOPAP) instrument were performed at the Leibniz Institute for Tropospheric Research (TROPOS) research site in Melpitz, Germany, from 19 to 29 April 2018. The dew water was also collected and analyzed from 8 to 14 May 2019 using a glass sampler. The high time resolution of HONO measurements showed characteristic diurnal variations that revealed that (i) vehicle emissions are a minor source of HONO at Melpitz station; (ii) the heterogeneous conversion of NO2 to HONO on the ground surface dominates HONO production at night; (iii) there is significant nighttime loss of HONO with a sink strength of 0.16Ā±0.12ppbv h-1; and (iv) dew water with mean NO-2 of 7.91Ā±2.14 Ī¼gm-2 could serve as a temporary HONO source in the morning when the dew droplets evaporate. The nocturnal observations of HONO and NO2 allowed the direct evaluation of the ground uptake coefficients for these species at night: Ī³NO2ā†’HONO = 2.4Ā±10-7 to 3.5Ā±10-6, Ī³HONO;ground = 1.7Ɨ10-5 to 2.8Ɨ10-4. A chemical model demonstrated that HONO deposition to the ground surface at night was 90 %-100% of the calculated unknown HONO source in the morning. These results suggest that dew water on the ground surface was controlling the temporal HONO distribution rather than straightforward NO2-HONO conversion. This can strongly enhance the OH reactivity throughout the morning time or in other planted areas that provide a large amount of ground surface based on the OH production rate calculation. Ā© 2020 Copernicus GmbH. All rights reserved.