Hygroscopic Properties of Aerosols from Open-Air Burning and Controlled Combustion of Biomass
(2005)- Abstract
- The major uncertainty in predicting the influence of human activities on global climate change is the effect of aerosols. Two physical properties of aerosols largely controlling their influence on climate are the particle number size distribution and the interaction of the particles with the surrounding water vapor.
The work presented in this thesis provides new information on the interaction between atmospheric water vapor and sub-micrometer aerosol particles resulting from the combustion of biomass. The investigations extend from smoldering, slash and burn fires, to almost complete combustion. The ability of particles to interact with water vapor determines the ambient size of the particles and consequently their... (More) - The major uncertainty in predicting the influence of human activities on global climate change is the effect of aerosols. Two physical properties of aerosols largely controlling their influence on climate are the particle number size distribution and the interaction of the particles with the surrounding water vapor.
The work presented in this thesis provides new information on the interaction between atmospheric water vapor and sub-micrometer aerosol particles resulting from the combustion of biomass. The investigations extend from smoldering, slash and burn fires, to almost complete combustion. The ability of particles to interact with water vapor determines the ambient size of the particles and consequently their ability to scatter light, as well as their ability to act as condensation nuclei for cloud droplets. Their interaction with water vapor is also important regarding the influence of aerosols on human health. The dry number size distributions of the aerosols are presented and discussed, as are particle mixing status and morphology. The instruments used include a hygroscopic differential mobility analyzer (H-TDMA) for measuring the particle water uptake at subsaturation and determining mixing status, a differential mobility particle sizer (DMPS) for measuring dry number size distributions, and a cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) counter for measuring CCN concentrations.
Several experiments were performed in order to study the physical properties of aerosols resulting from various kinds of biomass combustion. The results from these studies are presented together with some modeling work. Two of the experiments were performed in the Amazon basin in Brazil. In these studies the aerosol properties of the regional haze resulting from slashing and burning were studied ? both the fresh and aged biomass-burning aerosol ? and compared to the wet-season Amazonian background aerosol. The interaction between water vapor and aerosol particles containing inorganic and organic mixtures was studied in the laboratory, and water uptake was linked to chemical composition. Finally, the characteristics of particle emissions from two commercial moving-grate boilers in Sweden, operating on forest residues, were studied. The particles ranged from nearly hydrophobic to very hygroscopic, with hygroscopic diameter growth factors ranging between ~1.1 for the smoldering fires and ~ 1.8 for controlled combustion (at 90% RH). This is explained by the fact that the chemical composition of the aerosol particles is highly dependent on the combustion conditions. The components formed during complete combustion (mainly inorganic salts) and incomplete combustion (dominated by organic compounds) exhibit very different hygroscopic behavior.
A model for the prediction of the CCN concentration as a function of water vapor supersaturation was developed using number size distributions and the particle diameter growth at 90% RH as input data. The model proved to reproduce the measured CCN concentrations well. The CCN spectra for the various air masses studied in the Amazon basin were parameterized and can be used for input to, and validation of, models on various temporal and spatial scales, incorporating the description of cloud formation processes. Furthermore, the Zdanovskii-Stokes-Robinson mixing rule was successfully used to predict the hygroscopic diameter growth of mixtures containing inorganic and organic compounds. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/545585
- author
- Rissler, Jenny LU
- supervisor
- opponent
-
- Professor Covert, David, Department of Atmospheric Sciences, JISAO, University of Washington
- organization
- publishing date
- 2005
- type
- Thesis
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- cloud condensation nuclei, H-TDMA, CCN, hygroscopic growth, Teknik, internal and external mixture, CLAIRE, SMOCC, Physics, Fysik, Environmental chemistry, Technological sciences, Miljökemi, tandem differential mobility analyzer, slash and burn, Amazon, Biomass burning, combustion, Fysicumarkivet A:2005:Rissler
- pages
- 74 pages
- publisher
- Division of nuclear physics, Department of Physics, Lund University
- defense location
- Room B, Department of Physics, Professorsgatan 1, Lund Institute of Technology.
- defense date
- 2005-11-18 10:15:00
- ISBN
- 91-628-6672-9
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- additional info
- Birgitta Svenningsson, Jenny Rissler, Erik Swietlicki, Mihaela Mircea, Merete Bilde, Maria Christina Facchini, Stefano Decesari, Sandro Fuzzi, Jingchuan Zhou, Jacob Monster and Thomas Rosenorn. 2005. Hygroscopic growth and critical supersaturations for mixed aerosol particles of inorganic and organic compounds of atmospheric relevance Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussions, vol 5 pp 2833-2877. Department of physics, Lund UniversityJenny Rissler, Erik Swietlicki, Jingchuan Zhou, Greg Roberts, O. Andreae Meinrat, Luciana Vanni Gatti and Paulo Artaxo. 2004. Physical properties of the sub-micrometer aerosol over the Amazon rain forest during the wet-to-dry season transition - comparison of modeled and measured CCN concentrations Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, vol 4 pp 2119-2143. Department of Physics, Lund UniversityJenny Rissler, Anders Vestin, Erik Swietlicki, Gilberto Fisch, Jingchuan Zhou, Paulo Artaxo and O. Andreae Meinrat. 2005. Size distribution and hygroscopic properties of aerosol particles from dry-season biomass burning in Amazonia Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussions, vol 5 pp 8149-8207. Department of Physics, Lund UniversityAnders Vestin, Jenny Rissler, Erik Swietlicki, Göran Frank and O. Andreae Meinrat. 2005. Cloud nucleating properties of the Amazonian dry season biomass burning aerosol - CCN Measurements and modeling vol - pp 1-21. Department of Physics, Lund University (manuscript)Jenny Rissler, Joakim Pagels, Erik Swietlicki, Aneta Wierzbicka, Michael Stand, Lena Lillieblad, Mats Bohgard and Mehri Sanati. 2005. Hygroscopic Behavior of Aerosol Particles Emitted from Biomass Fired Grate Boilers Aerosol Science and Technology, vol 39 pp 919-930. Department of Physics, Lund UniversityThe information about affiliations in this record was updated in December 2015. The record was previously connected to the following departments: Nuclear Physics (Faculty of Technology) (011013007)
- id
- 84c092e4-12f5-48d2-ba37-e114e39c054f (old id 545585)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 12:05:32
- date last changed
- 2018-11-21 21:08:56
@phdthesis{84c092e4-12f5-48d2-ba37-e114e39c054f, abstract = {{The major uncertainty in predicting the influence of human activities on global climate change is the effect of aerosols. Two physical properties of aerosols largely controlling their influence on climate are the particle number size distribution and the interaction of the particles with the surrounding water vapor.<br/><br> <br/><br> The work presented in this thesis provides new information on the interaction between atmospheric water vapor and sub-micrometer aerosol particles resulting from the combustion of biomass. The investigations extend from smoldering, slash and burn fires, to almost complete combustion. The ability of particles to interact with water vapor determines the ambient size of the particles and consequently their ability to scatter light, as well as their ability to act as condensation nuclei for cloud droplets. Their interaction with water vapor is also important regarding the influence of aerosols on human health. The dry number size distributions of the aerosols are presented and discussed, as are particle mixing status and morphology. The instruments used include a hygroscopic differential mobility analyzer (H-TDMA) for measuring the particle water uptake at subsaturation and determining mixing status, a differential mobility particle sizer (DMPS) for measuring dry number size distributions, and a cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) counter for measuring CCN concentrations.<br/><br> <br/><br> Several experiments were performed in order to study the physical properties of aerosols resulting from various kinds of biomass combustion. The results from these studies are presented together with some modeling work. Two of the experiments were performed in the Amazon basin in Brazil. In these studies the aerosol properties of the regional haze resulting from slashing and burning were studied ? both the fresh and aged biomass-burning aerosol ? and compared to the wet-season Amazonian background aerosol. The interaction between water vapor and aerosol particles containing inorganic and organic mixtures was studied in the laboratory, and water uptake was linked to chemical composition. Finally, the characteristics of particle emissions from two commercial moving-grate boilers in Sweden, operating on forest residues, were studied. The particles ranged from nearly hydrophobic to very hygroscopic, with hygroscopic diameter growth factors ranging between ~1.1 for the smoldering fires and ~ 1.8 for controlled combustion (at 90% RH). This is explained by the fact that the chemical composition of the aerosol particles is highly dependent on the combustion conditions. The components formed during complete combustion (mainly inorganic salts) and incomplete combustion (dominated by organic compounds) exhibit very different hygroscopic behavior.<br/><br> <br/><br> A model for the prediction of the CCN concentration as a function of water vapor supersaturation was developed using number size distributions and the particle diameter growth at 90% RH as input data. The model proved to reproduce the measured CCN concentrations well. The CCN spectra for the various air masses studied in the Amazon basin were parameterized and can be used for input to, and validation of, models on various temporal and spatial scales, incorporating the description of cloud formation processes. Furthermore, the Zdanovskii-Stokes-Robinson mixing rule was successfully used to predict the hygroscopic diameter growth of mixtures containing inorganic and organic compounds.}}, author = {{Rissler, Jenny}}, isbn = {{91-628-6672-9}}, keywords = {{cloud condensation nuclei; H-TDMA; CCN; hygroscopic growth; Teknik; internal and external mixture; CLAIRE; SMOCC; Physics; Fysik; Environmental chemistry; Technological sciences; Miljökemi; tandem differential mobility analyzer; slash and burn; Amazon; Biomass burning; combustion; Fysicumarkivet A:2005:Rissler}}, language = {{eng}}, publisher = {{Division of nuclear physics, Department of Physics, Lund University}}, school = {{Lund University}}, title = {{Hygroscopic Properties of Aerosols from Open-Air Burning and Controlled Combustion of Biomass}}, year = {{2005}}, }