17 research outputs found
Influence of water uptake on the aerosol particle light scattering coefficients of the Central European aerosol
The influence of aerosol water uptake on the aerosol particle light scattering was examined at the regional continental research site Melpitz, Germany. The scattering enhancement factor f(RH), defined as the aerosol particle scattering coefficient at a certain relative humidity (RH) divided by its dry value, was measured using a humidified nephelometer. The chemical composition and other microphysical properties were measured in parallel. f(RH) showed a strong variation, e.g. with values between 1.2 and 3.6 at RH=85% and λ=550 nm. The chemical composition was found to be the main factor determining the magnitude of f(RH), since the magnitude of f(RH) clearly correlated with the inorganic mass fraction measured by an aerosol mass spectrometer (AMS). Hysteresis within the recorded humidograms was observed and explained by long-range transported sea salt. A closure study using Mie theory showed the consistency of the measured parameters
Effect of hygroscopic growth on the aerosol light-scattering coefficient: A review of measurements, techniques and error sources
Knowledge of the scattering enhancement factor, f(RH), is important for an accurate description of direct
aerosol radiative forcing. This factor is defined as the ratio between the scattering coefficient at enhanced
relative humidity, RH, to a reference (dry) scattering coefficient. Here, we review the different experimental
designs used to measure the scattering coefficient at dry and humidified conditions as well as the
procedures followed to analyze the measurements. Several empirical parameterizations for the relationship
between f(RH) and RH have been proposed in the literature. These parameterizations have been
reviewed and tested using experimental data representative of different hygroscopic growth behavior
and a new parameterization is presented. The potential sources of error in f(RH) are discussed. A Monte
Carlo method is used to investigate the overall measurement uncertainty, which is found to be around 20
e40% for moderately hygroscopic aerosols. The main factors contributing to this uncertainty are the
uncertainty in RH measurement, the dry reference state and the nephelometer uncertainty. A literature
survey of nephelometry-based f(RH) measurements is presented as a function of aerosol type. In general,
the highest f(RH) values were measured in clean marine environments, with pollution having a major
influence on f(RH). Dust aerosol tended to have the lowest reported hygroscopicity of any of the aerosol
types studied. Major open questions and suggestions for future research priorities are outlined.This work was supported by the Andalusia Regional Government through projects P10-RNM-6299 and P12-RNM-2409; by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness and FEDER through project CGL2013_45410-R; and by European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 654109, ACTRIS-2. G. Titos was partially funded by Programa del Plan Propio de Investigación “Contrato Puente” of the University of Granada. We thank the Stockholm International Meteorological Institute (IMI) for travel support of G. Titos
Study of the relative humidity dependence of aerosol light-scattering in southern Spain
This investigation focuses on the characterisation of the aerosol particle hygroscopicity. Aerosol particle optical
properties were measured at Granada, Spain, during winter and spring seasons in 2013. Measured optical
properties included particle light-absorption coefficient (sap) and particle light-scattering coefficient (ssp) at dry
conditions and at relative humidity (RH) of 85 +/- 10%. The scattering enhancement factor, f(RH=85%), had a
mean value of 1.5 +/- 0.2 and 1.6 +/- 0.3 for winter and spring campaigns, respectively. Cases of high scattering
enhancement were more frequent during the spring campaign with 27% of the f(RH=85%) values above
1.8, while during the winter campaign only 8% of the data were above 1.8. A Saharan dust event (SDE), which
occurred during the spring campaign, was characterised by a predominance of large particles with low
hygroscopicity. For the day when the SDE was more intense, a mean daily value of f(RH=85%)=1.3 +/- 0.2 was
calculated. f(RH=85%) diurnal cycle showed two minima during the morning and afternoon traffic rush hours
due to the increase in non-hygroscopic particles such as black carbon and road dust. This was confirmed by
small values of the single-scattering albedo and the scattering Angstrom exponent. A significant correlation
between f(RH=85%) and the fraction of particulate organic matter and sulphate was obtained. Finally, the
impact of ambient RH in the aerosol radiative forcing was found to be very small due to the low ambient RH.
For high RH values, the hygroscopic effect should be taken into account since the aerosol forcing efficiency
changed from -13W/m2 at dry conditions to -17W/m2 at RH=85%.This work was supported by the Andalusia Regional Government through projects P10-RNM-6299 and P12-RNM-2409; by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness through projects CGL2010-18782, CSD2007-00067, CGL2011-13580-E/CLI and CGL2011-16124-E; and by EU through ACTRIS project (EU INFRA-2010-1.1.16-262254).G. Titos was funded by the program FPI of the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness – Secretariat of Science, Innovation and Development under grant BES-2011-043721
