Articles | Volume 15, issue 2
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-15-845-2015
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-15-845-2015
Research article
 | 
23 Jan 2015
Research article |  | 23 Jan 2015

Characterization of biomass burning emissions from cooking fires, peat, crop residue, and other fuels with high-resolution proton-transfer-reaction time-of-flight mass spectrometry

C. E. Stockwell, P. R. Veres, J. Williams, and R. J. Yokelson

Download

Interactive discussion

Status: closed
Status: closed
AC: Author comment | RC: Referee comment | SC: Short comment | EC: Editor comment
Printer-friendly Version - Printer-friendly version Supplement - Supplement

Peer-review completion

AR: Author's response | RR: Referee report | ED: Editor decision
AR by Robert Yokelson on behalf of the Authors (09 Dec 2014)  Author's response   Manuscript 
ED: Publish as is (09 Dec 2014) by Dominick Spracklen
AR by Robert Yokelson on behalf of the Authors (09 Dec 2014)
Download
Short summary
We used a high-resolution proton-transfer-reaction time-of-flight mass spectrometer to measure emissions from peat, crop residue, cooking fires, etc. We assigned > 80% of the mass of gas-phase organic compounds and much of it was secondary organic aerosol precursors. The open cooking emissions were much larger than from advanced cookstoves. Little-studied N-containing organic compounds accounted for 0.1-8.7% of the fuel N and may influence new particle formation.
Altmetrics
Final-revised paper
Preprint