4.7 Article

Chemical composition, optical properties, and oxidative potential of water- and methanol-soluble organic compounds emitted from the combustion of biomass materials and coal

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS
Volume 21, Issue 17, Pages 13187-13205

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/acp-21-13187-2021

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41977188, 41673177]
  2. State Key Laboratory of Organic Geochemistry, GIGCAS [SKLOG2020-3]
  3. Guangdong Foundation for Program of Science and Technology Research [2019B121205006]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study investigated the characteristics of brown carbon emitted from biomass burning and coal combustion, finding that methanol-soluble organic carbon (MSOC) had the highest light absorption capacity and may better represent total BrC. Significant differences were observed between water-soluble fractions emitted from biomass burning and coal combustion, with biomass burning smoke having higher water-soluble BrC fractions and lower light absorption efficiency.
Biomass burning (BB) and coal combustion (CC) are important sources of brown carbon (BrC) in ambient aerosols. In this study, six biomass materials and five types of coal were combusted to generate fine smoke particles. The BrC fractions, including water-soluble organic carbon (WSOC), humic-like substance carbon (HULIS-C), and methanol-soluble organic carbon (MSOC), were subsequently fractionated, and their optical properties and chemical structures were then comprehensively investigated using UV-visible spectroscopy, proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (H-1 NMR), and fluorescence excitation-emission matrix (EEM) spectroscopy combined with parallel factor (PARAFAC) analysis. In addition, the oxidative potential (OP) of BB and CC BrC was measured with the dithiothreitol (DTT) method. The results showed that WSOC, HULIS-C, and MSOC accounted for 2.3%-22%, 0.5%-10%, and 6.4%-73% of the total mass of combustion-derived smoke PM2.5, respectively, with MSOC extracting the highest concentrations of organic compounds. The MSOC fractions had the highest light absorption capacity (mass absorption efficiency at 365 nm (MAE(365)): 1.0-2.7m(2)/gC) for both BB and CC smoke, indicating that MSOC contained more of the strong light-absorbing components. Therefore, MSOC may represent the total BrC better than the water-soluble fractions. Some significant differences were observed between the BrC fractions emitted from BB and CC with more water-soluble BrC fractions with higher MAE(365) and lower absorption Angstrom exponent values detected in smoke emitted from BB than from CC. EEM-PARAFAC identified four fluorophores: two protein-like, one humic-like, and one polyphenol-like fluorophores. The protein-like substances were the dominant components of WSOC (47%-80%), HULIS-C (44%-87%), and MSOC (42%-70%). The H-1-NMR results suggested that BB BrC contained more oxygenated aliphatic functional groups (H-C-O), whereas CC BrC contained more unsaturated fractions (H-C-C= and Ar-H). The DTT assays indicated that BB BrC generally had a stronger oxidative potential (DTTm, 2.6-85 pmol/min/mu g) than CC BrC (DTTm, 0.4-11 pmol/min/mu g), with MSOC having a stronger OP than WSOC and HULIS-C. In addition, HULIS-C contributed more than half of the DTT activity of WSOC (63.1% +/- 15.5%), highlighting that HULIS was a major contributor of reactive oxygen species (ROS) production in WSOC. Furthermore, the principal component analysis and Pearson correlation coefficients indicated that highly oxygenated humic-like fluorophore C4 may be the important DTT active substances in BrC.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available