Chemical characterization of submicron aerosol particles collected over
the Indian Ocean
Gabriel R, Mayol-Bracero OL, Andreae MO
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES
107 (D19): Art. No. 8005 AUG 17 2002
Abstract:
Submicron aerosol particles (Dp<1 μm) were sampled with stacked filter
units on the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) Hercules C-130
aircraft during February-March 1999 as a contribution to the Indian Ocean Experiment
(INDOEX). We determined the vertical and spatial distribution of the major aerosol
components (NH4+, Na+, K+, Mg2+, Ca2+, methyl sulfonic acid, Cl-, NO3-, SO42-,
oxalate, organic carbon, and black carbon) over the Indian Ocean to examine
the role of pollution aerosols on indirect and direct radiative forcing. High
pollution levels were observed over the entire northern Indian Ocean down to
the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) located between the equator and 10degreesS.
In the northern part of the Indian Ocean (5-15degreesN, 66degrees-73degreesE),
high concentrations of carbonaceous aerosol and pollution-derived inorganic
species were found in a layer extending from the sea surface to about 3.5 km
asl. In this layer, the average mass concentration of all aerosol species detected
by our technique ranged between 7 and 34 mug m(-3), comparable to pollution
levels observed in industrialized regions. In the Southern Hemisphere (1degrees-9degreesS,
66degrees-73degreesE), the aerosol concentrations rapidly declined to remote
background levels of about 2 mug m(-3). The concentrations of non-sea-salt sulfate
(the main light scattering component) ranged from maximum values of 12.7 mug
m(-3) in the Northern Hemisphere to 0.2 mug m(-3) in the Southern Hemisphere.
Carbonaceous aerosol contributes between 40% and 60% to the fine aerosol mass
of all determined components. An unusually high fraction of black carbon (up
to 16% in the polluted areas) is responsible for its high light absorption coefficient.
Author Keywords:
aerosol, ions, black carbon, organic carbon, Indian Ocean, Marine Boundary Layer
KeyWords Plus:
SEA-SALT SULFATE, PRE-INDOEX CRUISE, SULFUR-DIOXIDE, NORTH-ATLANTIC, PACIFIC-OCEAN,
ARABIAN SEA, EMISSIONS, DISTRIBUTIONS, NITRATE, MODEL
Addresses:
Gabriel R, Max Planck Inst Chem, Biogeochem Dept, D-55020 Mainz, Germany
Max Planck Inst Chem, Biogeochem Dept, D-55020 Mainz, Germany
Publisher:
AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION, 2000 FLORIDA AVE NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20009 USA
IDS Number:
634ZQ
ISSN:
0747-7309