炭黑
辐射传输
大气(单位)
大气科学
环境科学
吸收(声学)
碳纤维
粒子(生态学)
材料科学
化学
物理
光学
气象学
地质学
海洋学
复合数
复合材料
天然橡胶
有机化学
作者
Dantong Liu,James Whitehead,M. Rami Alfarra,Ernesto Reyes‐Villegas,Dominick V. Spracklen,Carly Reddington,Shaofei Kong,P. I. Williams,Yu-Chieh Ting,Sophie L. Haslett,Jonathan Taylor,Michael Flynn,W. T. W. Morgan,G. McFiggans,Hugh Coe,J. D. Allan
摘要
Atmospheric black carbon makes an important but poorly quantified contribution to the warming of the global atmosphere. Laboratory and modelling studies have shown that the addition of non-black-carbon materials to black-carbon particles may enhance the particles’ light absorption by 50 to 60% by refracting and reflecting light. Real-world experimental evidence for this ‘lensing’ effect is scant and conflicting, showing that absorption enhancements can be less than 5% or as large as 140%. Here we present simultaneous quantifications of the composition and optical properties of individual atmospheric black-carbon particles. We show that particles with a mass ratio of non-black carbon to black carbon of less than 1.5, which is typical of fresh traffic sources, are best represented as having no absorption enhancement. In contrast, black-carbon particles with a ratio greater than 3, which is typical of biomass-burning emissions, are best described assuming optical lensing leading to an absorption enhancement. We introduce a generalized hybrid model approach for estimating scattering and absorption enhancements based on laboratory and atmospheric observations. We conclude that the occurrence of the absorption enhancement of black-carbon particles is determined by the particles’ mass ratio of non-black carbon to black carbon. Mixing with non-black carbon can enhance the radiative effect of black-carbon aerosols. Lab and field measurements of aerosol properties reveal that the mass ratio of black to non-black carbon determines the amount of enhancement.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI