Chemical Evolution of Biomass Burning Aerosols across Wildfire Plumes in the Western U.S.: From Near-Source to Regional Scales.

ACS ES&T Air Pub Date : 2025-03-28 eCollection Date: 2025-04-11 DOI:10.1021/acsestair.5c00002
Ryan Farley, Shan Zhou, Sonya Collier, Wenqing Jiang, Timothy B Onasch, John E Shilling, Lawrence Kleinman, Arthur J Sedlacek Iii, Qi Zhang
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Abstract

The atmospheric processing of biomass burning organic aerosol (BBOA) and its implications for tropospheric aerosol physicochemical properties remain uncertain. To address this gap, we investigate the chemical transformation of BBOA from wildfire events in the western U.S., using data from aerosol mass spectrometers aboard the DOE G-1 aircraft and at the Mt. Bachelor Observatory (∼2800 m a.s.l.) during the summers of 2013 and 2019. This study captures dynamic changes in submicron particulate matter (PM1) concentrations and chemical profiles within wildfire plumes that span a broad range of atmospheric ages, from fresh emissions (<30 min) to plumes transported for several days. As plumes age, the oxidation state of organic aerosols (OA) increases, accompanied by the formation of secondary aerosol components such as phenolic secondary OA (SOA) species, carboxylic acids, and potassium sulfate. Early plume evolution is marked by the evaporation of semivolatile components and the formation of alcohol and peroxide functional groups, while extended aging produces more oxidized species, including carboxylic acids and carbonyl compounds. Normalized excess mixing ratios (NEMRs) of OA to CO demonstrate a complex interplay between evaporation, SOA formation, and oxidative loss. Using positive matrix factorization (PMF), we identify distinct BBOA types representing various stages of atmospheric processing and assess the contributions of primary BBOA and secondary BBOA formed through atmospheric reactions. These findings shed light on the intricate mechanisms governing the evolution of BBOA characteristics within wildfire plumes, providing critical insights to improve atmospheric modeling of BBOA and better assess the environmental and climatic impacts of wildfire emissions.

美国西部野火羽流中生物质燃烧气溶胶的化学演化:从近源到区域尺度。
生物质燃烧有机气溶胶(BBOA)的大气过程及其对对流层气溶胶物理化学性质的影响仍不确定。为了解决这一差距,我们研究了美国西部野火事件中BBOA的化学转化,使用了2013年和2019年夏季美国能源部G-1飞机上的气溶胶质谱仪和巴学士山天文台(约2800米a.s.l)的数据。这项研究捕获了亚微米颗粒物质(PM1)浓度和野火羽流中的化学特征的动态变化,这些羽流跨越了广泛的大气年龄范围,从新鲜排放(
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