Arctic Aerosol Sources and Continental Organic Aerosol Hygroscopicity

Atmospheric particles can affect climate directly, by scattering solar radiation, or indirectly, by acting as the seed upon which cloud droplets form. These clouds can then cool the earth's surface by reflecting incoming sunlight. In order to constrain the large uncertainties in predicting the...

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Main Author: Chang, Rachel Ying-Wen
Other Authors: Abbatt, Jonathan P. D., Chemistry
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published:
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/29679
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spelling ftunivtoronto:oai:localhost:1807/29679 2023-05-15T14:53:09+02:00 Arctic Aerosol Sources and Continental Organic Aerosol Hygroscopicity Chang, Rachel Ying-Wen Abbatt, Jonathan P. D. Chemistry NO_RESTRICTION http://hdl.handle.net/1807/29679 en_ca eng http://hdl.handle.net/1807/29679 Arctic aerosol cloud condensation nuclei aerosol-cloud interactions aerosol nucleation 0725 0768 Thesis ftunivtoronto 2020-06-17T11:19:12Z Atmospheric particles can affect climate directly, by scattering solar radiation, or indirectly, by acting as the seed upon which cloud droplets form. These clouds can then cool the earth's surface by reflecting incoming sunlight. In order to constrain the large uncertainties in predicting the ultimate effect of aerosol on climate, the sources of atmospheric particles and their subsequent ability to turn into cloud droplets needs to be better understood. This thesis addresses two parts of this issue: the sources of Arctic aerosol and the hygroscopicity of continental organic aerosol. Small particles were observed in Baffin Bay during September 2008 that coincided with high atmospheric and ocean surface dimethyl sulphide (DMS) concentrations suggesting that the aerosol formed from oceanic sources. An aerosol microphysics box model confirmed that local DMS could have produced the observed particles. In addition, the particle chemical composition was measured using aerosol mass spectrometry in the central Arctic Ocean in August 2008 and particles were found to be 43% organic and 46% sulphate. Factor analysis further apportioned the aerosol mass to marine biogenic and continental sources 33% and 36% of the time, respectively, with the source of the remaining mass unidentified. The second part of the study parameterises the hygroscopicity of the ambient organic aerosol fraction (κorg) at Egbert, Ontario and Whistler, British Columbia. This was done using two methods: 1) by assuming that the oxygenated organic component was hygroscopic and that the unoxygenated organic component was non-hygroscopic, κ of the oxygenated component was found to be 0.22 ± 0.04, and 2) by assuming that κorg varied linearly with the atomic oxygen to atomic carbon ratio, it could be parameterised as κorg = (0.29 ± 0.05) × (O/C). Calculations predict that knowing κorg is important in urban, semi-urban, and remote locations whenever the inorganic mass fraction is low. PhD Thesis Arctic Arctic Ocean Baffin Bay Baffin Bay Baffin University of Toronto: Research Repository T-Space Arctic Arctic Ocean Baffin Bay Egbert ENVELOPE(-69.649,-69.649,-69.951,-69.951)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Toronto: Research Repository T-Space
op_collection_id ftunivtoronto
language English
topic Arctic aerosol
cloud condensation nuclei
aerosol-cloud interactions
aerosol nucleation
0725
0768
spellingShingle Arctic aerosol
cloud condensation nuclei
aerosol-cloud interactions
aerosol nucleation
0725
0768
Chang, Rachel Ying-Wen
Arctic Aerosol Sources and Continental Organic Aerosol Hygroscopicity
topic_facet Arctic aerosol
cloud condensation nuclei
aerosol-cloud interactions
aerosol nucleation
0725
0768
description Atmospheric particles can affect climate directly, by scattering solar radiation, or indirectly, by acting as the seed upon which cloud droplets form. These clouds can then cool the earth's surface by reflecting incoming sunlight. In order to constrain the large uncertainties in predicting the ultimate effect of aerosol on climate, the sources of atmospheric particles and their subsequent ability to turn into cloud droplets needs to be better understood. This thesis addresses two parts of this issue: the sources of Arctic aerosol and the hygroscopicity of continental organic aerosol. Small particles were observed in Baffin Bay during September 2008 that coincided with high atmospheric and ocean surface dimethyl sulphide (DMS) concentrations suggesting that the aerosol formed from oceanic sources. An aerosol microphysics box model confirmed that local DMS could have produced the observed particles. In addition, the particle chemical composition was measured using aerosol mass spectrometry in the central Arctic Ocean in August 2008 and particles were found to be 43% organic and 46% sulphate. Factor analysis further apportioned the aerosol mass to marine biogenic and continental sources 33% and 36% of the time, respectively, with the source of the remaining mass unidentified. The second part of the study parameterises the hygroscopicity of the ambient organic aerosol fraction (κorg) at Egbert, Ontario and Whistler, British Columbia. This was done using two methods: 1) by assuming that the oxygenated organic component was hygroscopic and that the unoxygenated organic component was non-hygroscopic, κ of the oxygenated component was found to be 0.22 ± 0.04, and 2) by assuming that κorg varied linearly with the atomic oxygen to atomic carbon ratio, it could be parameterised as κorg = (0.29 ± 0.05) × (O/C). Calculations predict that knowing κorg is important in urban, semi-urban, and remote locations whenever the inorganic mass fraction is low. PhD
author2 Abbatt, Jonathan P. D.
Chemistry
format Thesis
author Chang, Rachel Ying-Wen
author_facet Chang, Rachel Ying-Wen
author_sort Chang, Rachel Ying-Wen
title Arctic Aerosol Sources and Continental Organic Aerosol Hygroscopicity
title_short Arctic Aerosol Sources and Continental Organic Aerosol Hygroscopicity
title_full Arctic Aerosol Sources and Continental Organic Aerosol Hygroscopicity
title_fullStr Arctic Aerosol Sources and Continental Organic Aerosol Hygroscopicity
title_full_unstemmed Arctic Aerosol Sources and Continental Organic Aerosol Hygroscopicity
title_sort arctic aerosol sources and continental organic aerosol hygroscopicity
publishDate
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/29679
long_lat ENVELOPE(-69.649,-69.649,-69.951,-69.951)
geographic Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Baffin Bay
Egbert
geographic_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Baffin Bay
Egbert
genre Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Baffin Bay
Baffin Bay
Baffin
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Baffin Bay
Baffin Bay
Baffin
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1807/29679
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