Black Carbon Reflects Extremely Efficient Aerosol Wet Removal in Monsoonal Convective Transport

  • J. Berberich
  • , S. A. Jacoby
  • , G. Michailoudi
  • , J. P. Schwarz
  • , S. Viciani
  • , F. D’Amato
  • , G. Bianchini
  • , M. Barucci
  • , T. Campos
  • , K. Ullman
  • , J. R. Podolske
  • , C. Gurganus
  • , W. P. Smith
  • , R. Ueyama
  • , S. B. Honomichl
  • , L. L. Pan
  • , S. Woods
  • , B. Wienzierl
  • , M. Dollner
  • , A. E. Perring (Corresponding author)

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

Refractory black carbon (rBC) is a primary aerosol species, produced through incomplete combustion, that absorbs sunlight and contributes to positive radiative forcing. The overall climate effect of rBC depends on its spatial distribution and atmospheric lifetime, both of which are impacted by the efficiency with which rBC is transported or removed by convective systems. These processes are poorly constrained by observations. It is especially interesting to investigate rBC transport efficiency through the Asian Summer Monsoon (ASM) since this meteorological pattern delivers vast quantities of boundary layer air from Asia, where rBC emissions are high to the upper troposphere/lower stratosphere (UT/LS) where the lifetime of rBC is expected to be long. Here, we present in situ observations of rBC made during the Asian Summer Monsoon Chemistry and Climate Impact Project of summer, 2022. We use observed relationships between rBC and CO in ASM outflow to show that rBC is removed nearly completely (>98%) from uplifted air and that rBC concentrations in ASM outflow are statistically indistinguishable from the UT/LS background. We compare observed rBC and CO concentrations to those expected based on two chemical transport models and find that the models reproduce CO to within a factor of 2 at all altitudes whereas rBC is overpredicted by a factor of 20–100 at altitudes associated with ASM outflow. We find that the rBC particles in recently convected air have thinner coatings than those found in the UTLS background, suggesting transport of a small number of rBC particles that are negligible for concentration.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2024JD042692
Number of pages12
JournalJournal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
Volume130
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 16 Feb 2025

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 103039 Aerosol physics
  • 105205 Climate change

Keywords

  • ACCLIP
  • black carbon
  • convective transport
  • monsoon
  • rBC
  • UTLS

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