Inter-comparison of elemental and organic carbon mass measurements from three North American national long-term monitoring networks at a co-located site
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Published:2019-08-26
Issue:8
Volume:12
Page:4543-4560
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ISSN:1867-8548
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Container-title:Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Meas. Tech.
Author:
Chan Tak W.ORCID, Huang LinORCID, Banwait Kulbir, Zhang Wendy, Ernst Darrell, Wang XiaoliangORCID, Watson John G.ORCID, Chow Judith C., Green Mark, Czimczik Claudia I., Santos Guaciara M., Sharma Sangeeta, Jones Keith
Abstract
Abstract. Carbonaceous aerosol is a major contributor to the total aerosol load and
being monitored by diverse measurement approaches. Here, 10 years
(2005–2015) of continuous carbonaceous aerosol measurements collected at the
Centre of Atmospheric Research Experiments (CARE) in Egbert, Ontario, Canada,
on quartz-fiber filters by three independent networks (Interagency
Monitoring of Protected Visual Environments, IMPROVE; Canadian Air and
Precipitation Monitoring Network, CAPMoN; and Canadian Aerosol Baseline
Measurement, CABM) were compared. Specifically, the study evaluated how
differences in sample collection and analysis affected the concentrations of
total carbon (TC), organic carbon (OC), and elemental carbon (EC). Results
show that different carbonaceous fractions measured by various networks were
consistent and comparable in general among the three networks over the 10-year period, even with different sampling systems/frequencies, analytical
protocols, and artifact corrections. The CAPMoN TC, OC, and EC obtained from
the DRI
model 2001 thermal–optical carbon analyzer following the IMPROVE-TOR
protocol (denoted as DRI-TOR) method were lower than those determined from the
IMPROVE_A TOR method by 17 %, 14 %, and 18 %,
respectively. When using transmittance for charring correction, the
corresponding carbonaceous fractions obtained from the Sunset-TOT were lower
by as much as 30 %, 15 %, and 75 %, respectively. In comparison, the
CABM TC, OC, and EC obtained from a thermal method, EnCan-Total-900 (ECT9), were higher than
the corresponding fractions from IMPROVE_A TOR by 20 %–30 %,
0 %–15 %, and 60 %–80 %, respectively. Ambient OC and EC concentrations were
found to increase when ambient temperature exceeded 10 ∘C. These
increased ambient concentrations of OC during summer were possibly
attributed to secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation and forest fire
emissions, while elevated EC concentrations were potentially influenced by
forest fire emissions and increased vehicle emissions. Results also show
that the pyrolyzed organic carbon (POC) obtained from the ECT9 protocol could provide additional information on SOA although more
research is still needed.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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