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Relative errors of derived multi-wavelengths intensive aerosol optical properties using CAPS_SSA, Nephelometer and TAP measurements.

Authors :
Weber, Patrick
Petzold, Andreas
Bischof, Oliver F.
Fischer, Benedikt
Berg, Marcel
Freedman, Andrew
Onasch, Timothy
Bundke, Ulrich
Source :
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques Discussions. 9/27/2021, p1-32. 32p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Aerosol intensive optical properties like the Ångström exponents for aerosol light extinction, scattering and absorption, or the single-scattering albedo are indicators for aerosol size distributions, chemical composition and radiative behaviour and contain also source information. The observation of these parameters requires the measurement of aerosol optical properties at multiple wavelengths which usually implies the use of several instruments. Our study aims to quantify the uncertainties of the determination of multiple-wavelengths intensive properties by an optical closure approach, using different test aerosols. In our laboratory closure study, we measured the full set of aerosol optical properties for a range of light-absorbing aerosols with different properties, mixed externally with ammonium sulphate to generate aerosols of controlled single-scattering albedo. The investigated aerosol types were: fresh combustion soot emitted by an inverted flame soot generator (SOOT, fractal aggregates), Aquadag (AQ, spherical shape), Cabot industrial soot (BC, compact clusters), and an acrylic paint (Magic Black, MB). One focus was on the validity of the Differential Method (DM: absorption = extinction minus scattering) for the determination of Ångström exponents for different particle loads and mixtures of light-absorbing aerosol with ammonium sulphate, in comparison to data obtained from single instruments. The instruments used in this study were two CAPS PMssa (Cavity Attenuated Phase Shift Single Scattering Albedo, ? = 450, 630 nm) for light extinction and scattering coefficients, one Integrating Nephelometer (? = 450, 550, 700 nm) for light scattering coefficient and one Tricolour Absorption Photometer (TAP, ? = 467, 528, 652 nm) for filter-based light absorption coefficient measurement. Our key finding is that the coefficients of light absorption sap, scattering ssp and extinction sep from the Differential Method agree with data from single reference instruments, and the slopes of regression lines equal unity within the precision error. We found, however, that the precision error for the DM exceeds 100% for sap values lower than 10-20 Mm-1 for atmospheric relevant single scattering albedo. This increasing uncertainty with decreasing sap yields an absorption Ångström exponent (AAE) that is too uncertain for measurements in the range of atmospheric aerosol loadings. We recommend using DM only for measuring AAE values for sap > 50 Mm-1. Ångström exponents for scattering and extinction are reliable for extinction coefficients from 20 up to 1000 Mm-1 and stay within 10% deviation from reference instruments, regardless of the chosen method. Single-scattering albedo (SSA) values for 450 nm and 630 nm wavelengths agree with values from the reference method ssp (NEPH)/sep (CAPS PMSSA) with less than 10% uncertainty for all instrument combinations and sampled aerosol types which fulfil the defined goals for measurement uncertainty of 10% proposed by Laj et al., 2020 for GCOS (Global Climate Observing System) applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18678610
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques Discussions
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
152754277
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-2021-284