posted on 2024-04-04, 12:37authored byYvette Gramlich, Karolina Siegel, Sophie L. Haslett, Roxana S. Cremer, Chris Lunder, Snehitha M. Kommula, Angela Buchholz, Karl Espen Yttri, Gang Chen, Radovan Krejci, Paul Zieger, Annele Virtanen, Ilona Riipinen, Claudia Mohr
Emissions from biomass
burning (BB) occurring at midlatitudes can
reach the Arctic, where they influence the remote aerosol population.
By using measurements of levoglucosan and black carbon, we identify
seven BB events reaching Svalbard in 2020. We find that most of the
BB events are significantly different to the rest of the year (nonevents)
for most of the chemical and physical properties. Aerosol mass and
number concentrations are enhanced by up to 1 order of magnitude during
the BB events. During BB events, the submicrometer aerosol bulk composition
changes from an organic- and sulfate-dominated regime to a clearly
organic-dominated regime. This results in a significantly lower hygroscopicity
parameter κ for BB aerosol (0.4 ± 0.2) compared to nonevents
(0.5 ± 0.2), calculated from the nonrefractory aerosol composition.
The organic fraction in the BB aerosol showed no significant difference
for the O:C ratios (0.9 ± 0.3) compared to the year (0.9 ±
0.6). Accumulation mode particles were present during all BB events,
while in the summer an additional Aitken mode was observed, indicating
a mixture of the advected air mass with locally produced particles.
BB tracers (vanillic, homovanillic, and hydroxybenzoic acid, nitrophenol,
methylnitrophenol, and nitrocatechol) were significantly higher when
air mass back trajectories passed over active fire regions in Eastern
Europe, indicating agricultural and wildfires as sources. Our results
suggest that the impact of BB on the Arctic aerosol depends on the
season in which they occur, and agricultural and wildfires from Eastern
Europe have the potential to disturb the background conditions the
most.