作者
JB Gilman, BM Lerner, WC Kuster, PD Goldan, C Warneke, PR Veres, JM Roberts, JA De Gouw, IR Burling, RJ Yokelson
发表日期
2015/12/17
期刊
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
卷号
15
期号
24
页码范围
13915-13938
出版商
Copernicus GmbH
简介
A comprehensive suite of instruments was used to quantify the emissions of over 200 organic gases, including methane and volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and 9 inorganic gases from 56 laboratory burns of 18 different biomass fuel types common in the southeastern, southwestern, or northern US. A gas chromatograph-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) instrument provided extensive chemical detail of discrete air samples collected during a laboratory burn and was complemented by real-time measurements of organic and inorganic species via an open-path Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (OP-FTIR) instrument and three different chemical ionization-mass spectrometers. These measurements were conducted in February 2009 at the US Department of Agriculture's Fire Sciences Laboratory in Missoula, Montana and were used as the basis for a number of emission factors reported by Yokelson et al. (2013). The relative magnitude and composition of the gases emitted varied by individual fuel type and, more broadly, by the three geographic fuel regions being simulated. Discrete emission ratios relative to carbon monoxide (CO) were used to characterize the composition of gases emitted by mass; reactivity with the hydroxyl radical, OH; and potential secondary organic aerosol (SOA) precursors for the 3 different US fuel regions presented here. VOCs contributed less than 0.78 %  0.12 % of emissions by mole and less than 0.95 %  0.07 % of emissions by mass (on average) due to the predominance of CO, CO, CH, and NO emissions; however, VOCs contributed 70–90 (16) % to OH reactivity and were the only …
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