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JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 106, NO. D21,
PAGES 27,485–27,495,
2001
Dependence of aerosol light absorption and single-scattering albedo on ambient relative humidity for sulfate aerosols with
black carbon cores
Jens Redemann
Bay Area Environmental Research Institute, Sonoma, California, USA
Philip B. Russell
NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, California, USA
Patrick Hamill
San Jose State University, San Jose, California, USA
Abstract
Atmospheric aerosols frequently contain hygroscopic sulfate species and black carbon (soot) inclusions. In this paper we report
results of a modeling study to determine the change in aerosol absorption due to increases in ambient relative humidity (RH),
for three common sulfate species, assuming that the soot mass fraction is present as a single concentric core within each
particle. Because of the lack of detailed knowledge about various input parameters to models describing internally mixed aerosol
particle optics, we focus on results that were aimed at determining the maximum effect that particle humidification may have
on aerosol light absorption. In the wavelength range from 450 to 700 nm, maximum absorption humidification factors (ratio
of wet to “dry=30% RH” absorption) for single aerosol particles are found to be as large as 1.75 when the RH changes from
30 to 99.5%. Upon lesser humidification from 30 to 80% RH, absorption humidification for single particles is only as much
as 1.2, even for the most favorable combination of initial (“dry”) soot mass fraction and particle size. Integrated over monomodal
lognormal particle size distributions, maximum absorption humidification factors range between 1.07 and 1.15 for humidification
from 30 to 80% and between 1.1 and 1.35 for humidification from 30 to 95% RH for all species considered. The largest humidification
factors at a wavelength of 450 nm are obtained for “dry” particle size distributions that peak at a radius of 0.05 μm, while
the absorption humidification factors at 700 nm are largest for “dry” size distributions that are dominated by particles in
the radius range of 0.06 to 0.08 μm. Single-scattering albedo estimates at ambient conditions are often based on absorption
measurements at low RH (∼30%) and the assumption that aerosol absorption does not change upon humidification (i.e., absorption
humidification equal to unity). Our modeling study suggests that this assumption alone can introduce absolute errors in estimates
of the midvisible single-scattering albedo of up to 0.05 for realistic dry particle size distributions. Our study also indicates
that this error increases with increasing wavelength. The potential errors in aerosol single-scattering albedo derived here
are comparable in magnitude and in addition to uncertainties in single-scattering albedo estimates that are based on measurements
of aerosol light absorption and scattering.
Received 18
September
2000;
accepted 30
April
2001.
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Citation: Redemann, J., P. B. Russell, and P. Hamill
(2001),
Dependence of aerosol light absorption and single-scattering albedo on ambient relative humidity for sulfate aerosols with
black carbon cores,
J. Geophys. Res.,
106(D21),
27,485–27,495.
Copyright 2001 by the American Geophysical Union.
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