Issue 8, 2008

Suppression of nucleation mode particles by biomass burning in an urban environment: a case study

Abstract

Measurements of concentrations and size distributions of particles 4.7 to 160 nm were taken using an SMPS during the bonfire and firework celebrations on Bonfire Night in Leeds, UK, 2006. These celebrations provided an opportunity to study size distributions in a unique atmospheric pollution situation during and following a significant emission event due to open biomass burning. A log-normal fitting program was used to determine the characteristics of the modal groups present within hourly averaged size distributions. Results from the modal fitting showed that on bonfire night the smallest nucleation mode, which was present before and after the bonfire event and on comparison weekends, was not detected within the size distribution. In addition, there was a significant shift in the modal diameters of the remaining modes during the peak of the pollution event. Using the concept of a coagulation sink, the atmospheric lifetimes of smaller particles were significantly reduced during the pollution event, and thus were used to explain the disappearance of the smallest nucleation mode as well as changes in particle count mean diameters. The significance for particle mixing state is discussed.

Graphical abstract: Suppression of nucleation mode particles by biomass burning in an urban environment: a case study

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
05 Mar 2008
Accepted
13 Jun 2008
First published
07 Jul 2008

J. Environ. Monit., 2008,10, 979-988

Suppression of nucleation mode particles by biomass burning in an urban environment: a case study

E. L. Agus, J. J. N. Lingard and A. S. Tomlin, J. Environ. Monit., 2008, 10, 979 DOI: 10.1039/B803871F

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