Articles | Volume 19, issue 17
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-19-11545-2019
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-19-11545-2019
Research article
 | 
12 Sep 2019
Research article |  | 12 Sep 2019

Fossil fuel combustion and biomass burning sources of global black carbon from GEOS-Chem simulation and carbon isotope measurements

Ling Qi and Shuxiao Wang
Abstract

We identify sources (fossil fuel combustion versus biomass burning) of black carbon (BC) in the atmosphere and in deposition using a global 3-D chemical transport model GEOS-Chem. We validate the simulated sources against carbon isotope measurements of BC around the globe and find that the model reproduces mean biomass burning contribution (fbb; %) in various regions within a factor of 2 (except in Europe, where fbb is underestimated by 63 %). GEOS-Chem shows that contribution from biomass burning in the Northern Hemisphere (fbb: 35±14 %) is much less than that in the Southern Hemisphere (50±11 %). The largest atmospheric fbb is in Africa (64±20 %). Comparable contributions from biomass burning and fossil fuel combustion are found in southern (S) Asia (53±10 %), southeastern (SE) Asia (53±11 %), S America (47±14 %), the S Pacific (47±7 %), Australia (53±14 %) and the Antarctic (51±2 %). fbb is relatively small in eastern Asia (40±13 %), Siberia (35±8 %), the Arctic (33±6 %), Canada (31±7 %), the US (25±4 %) and Europe (19±7 %). Both observations and model results suggest that atmospheric fbb is higher in summer (59 %–78 %, varying with sub-regions) than in winter (28 %–32 %) in the Arctic, while it is higher in winter (42 %–58 %) and lower in summer (16 %–42 %) over the Himalayan–Tibetan Plateau. The seasonal variations of Atmosphericfbb are relatively flat in North America, Europe and Asia. We conducted four experiments to investigate the uncertainties associated with biofuel emissions, hygroscopicity of BC in fresh emissions, the aging rate and size-resolved wet scavenging. We find that doubling biofuel emissions for domestic heating north of 45 N increases fbb values in Europe in winter by ∼30 %, reducing the discrepancy between observed and modeled atmospheric fbb from −63 % to −54 %. The remaining large negative discrepancy between model and observations suggests that the biofuel emissions are probably still underestimated at high latitudes. Increasing the fraction of thickly coated hydrophilic BC from 20 % to 70 % in fresh biomass burning plumes increases the fraction of hydrophilic BC in biomass burning plumes by 0 %–20 % (varying with seasons and regions) and thereby reduces atmospheric fbb by up to 11 %. Faster aging (4 h e-folding time versus 1.15 d e-folding time) of BC in biomass burning plumes reduces atmospheric fbb by 7 % (1 %–14 %, varying with seasons and regions), with the largest reduction in remote regions, such as the Arctic, the Antarctic and the S Pacific. Using size-resolved scavenging accelerates scavenging of BC particles in both fossil fuel and biomass burning plumes, with a faster scavenging of BC in fossil fuel plumes. Thus, atmospheric fbb increases in most regions by 1 %–14 %. Overall, atmospheric fbb is determined mainly by fbb in emissions and, to a lesser extent, by atmospheric processes, such as aging and scavenging. This confirms the assumption that fbb in local emissions determines atmospheric fbb in previous studies, which compared measured atmospheric fbb directly with local fbb in bottom-up emission inventories.

Dates
1 Introduction

Black carbon (BC) in the atmosphere and deposited over snow and ice absorbs solar radiation, triggers positive feedbacks and exerts a positive radiative forcing on the global climate (IPCC, 2014). Estimates of BC radiative forcing span a large range (0.2–1 W m−2; Bond et al., 2013; IPCC, 2014). One of the uncertainties lies in the predictions of BC vertical profiles around the globe that are different by orders of magnitude, particularly in remote regions, by chemical transport and by climate models (Samset et al., 2013, 2014). To reduce the uncertainty, in addition to the widely used BC concentration observations in the troposphere, at the surface and in snow, observation-based source apportionment (fossil fuel versus biomass burning) of BC provides another dimension for constraining model simulations of BC distribution. The optical properties of BC from fossil fuel and biomass burning plumes are distinctively different (Bond et al., 2013), resulting in different radiative forcing from the two sources (Jacobson, 2010). Because of the relatively short lifetime compared to greenhouse gases, accurate source apportionment of BC is important for short-term climate change mitigation.

Carbon isotope analysis is effective in distinguishing emissions from fossil fuel combustion (e.g., coal, oil and natural gas) and contemporary biomass burning (expressed as contribution from biomass burning, fbb; %) because fossil emissions are free of 14C and biomass emissions have a characteristic 14C∕12C ratio that is proportional to atmospheric carbon dioxide at the time of carbon fixation (Reddy et al., 2002). Combining δ13C and Δ14C measurements further differentiates the contribution from coal and liquid fossil fuel combustion (oil, gasoline and diesel; Andersson et al., 2015, and references therein). Fossil fuel combustion has an anthropogenic origin, including industrial use, domestic cooking and heating, and transport (Bond et al., 2007). Contemporary biomass burning can come from both anthropogenic and natural sources. The former includes mainly industrial and domestic burning of biofuels (fuelwood, charcoal, agricultural residues and dung; Fernandes et al., 2007), and the latter involves open fires of forests, crops, grass and peatlands (van der Werf et al., 2010). Carbon isotope measurements are widely used for source apportionment of BC in the atmosphere in southern Asia (Gustafsson et al., 2009; Budhavant et al., 2015), eastern Asia (Chen et al., 2013; Andersson et al., 2015; Zhang et al., 2015; Li et al., 2016), Europe (Szidat et al., 2006, 2009; Zhang et al., 2012) and the Arctic (Barrett et al., 2015; Winiger et al., 2015, 2016, 2017); in snow over the Himalayan–Tibetan Plateau (Li et al., 2016); and in an Alpine ice core (Jenk et al., 2006).

Previous studies (Gustafsson et al., 2009; Chen et al., 2013; Li et al., 2016) compared carbon isotope measurements directly to the fbb of local bottom-up emission inventories. The assumption behind these studies is that the major controlling factor of fbb in the atmosphere is local emissions. However, BC-containing particles in fossil fuel and biomass burning plumes have distinctively different mixing states and hygroscopicities (Moteki et al., 2007; Schwarz et al., 2008; Shiraiwa et al., 2007; Akagi et al., 2012), which might further affect BC scavenging in the two kinds of plumes and thus fbb in the atmosphere and after deposition. Li et al. (2016) found smaller contribution from fossil fuel in snow than in air, suggesting that biomass burning emissions are easier to deposit compared to fossil fuel combustion emissions. Possible factors affecting fbb in the atmosphere and in deposition are mixing states and hygroscopicities in freshly emitted fossil fuel and biomass burning plumes, the consecutive aging rate, and scavenging. However, as far as we are aware, no study has quantified the contribution of different factors to sources in terms of global BC in the atmosphere and in deposition.

In this study, we simulate sources of BC (fossil fuel combustion versus biomass burning) using a global 3-D chemical transport model GEOS-Chem. We describe the model and the carbon isotope measurements in Sects. 2 and 3, respectively. We evaluate the model simulation of fbb in Sect. 4.1; analyze the spatial and temporal variations of fbb in Sect. 4.2; and evaluate the uncertainties associated with fbb in BC emissions, the BC mixing state and hygroscopicity in fresh emissions, aging rage and size-resolved scavenging in Sect. 4.3.

2 Model description

GEOS-Chem is a global chemical transport model driven by assimilated meteorological fields from the Goddard Earth Observing System (GEOS) of the NASA Global Modeling and Assimilation Office (Bey et al., 2001). We use GEOS-Chem v11-01 coupled with the TwO-Moment Aerosol Sectional (TOMAS) microphysics scheme (Adams and Seinfeld, 2002). This is a state-of-the-art global model for simulating global distribution of BC (Wang et al., 2011; Qi et al., 2017a, c). We use 15 size bins ranging from 3 nm to 10 µm, with tracers for sulfate, sea salt, organic aerosols, BC and dust (Pierce et al., 2007; Lee et al., 2009; D'Andrea et al., 2013; Kodros and Peirce, 2017). Modern-Era Retrospective analysis for Research and Applications, Version 2 (MERRA2), meteorological data sets are used to drive model simulation at 4 latitude × 5 longitude horizontal resolution and 47 vertical layers from the surface to 0.01 hPa. Global fossil fuel and biofuel combustion emissions of BC are from Bond et al. (2007) and Fernandes et al. (2007), respectively. We also include gas flaring emissions from Stohl et al. (2013). We use data of BC emissions in Asia by Li et al. (2017). We apply seasonal variations for domestic heating emissions based on the degree-day concept (Stohl et al., 2013; Qi et al., 2017c). We use daily open fire emissions from the Global Fire Emissions Database version 4 (GFED4; Giglio et al., 2013) in this study. We assume 20 % of the freshly emitted BC aerosols to be thickly coated and hydrophilic (Park et al., 2003). We assume that hydrophobic BC is converted to hydrophilic BC with an e-folding time of 1.15 d (Park et al., 2005). Wet deposition follows Liu et al. (2001), with updates of below-cloud scavenging efficiency and in-cloud scavenging in ice clouds in Wang et al. (2011) and updates of BC scavenging in mix-phase clouds in Qi et al. (2017a).

3 Observation data

To our knowledge, carbon isotope analysis of BC sources in the atmosphere is available at 65 sites across the globe in different seasons (Table S1 and Fig. S3 in the Supplement). Generally, fbb values are larger in remote regions (36±16 % in southern Asia, 33±14 % in the Arctic and 39±17 % over the Himalayan–Tibetan Plateau) than those in urban regions (13±4 % in North America), indicating a larger contribution from biofuel and open fires in rural, developing and remote regions. In addition, fbb values strongly depend on seasons (see detailed analysis in Sect. 4.2.1). Carbon isotope measurements of BC in snow are only available over the Tibetan Plateau from Li et al. (2016).

The isotope mass balance equation based on the Δ14C (14C∕12C) data was applied to apportion the relative contributions to atmospheric BC from biomass burning of modern carbon (fbb) and fossil fuel combustion:

(1) Δ 14 C = Δ 14 C bb f bb + Δ 14 C ff 1 - f bb ,

where Δ14C is the measured radiocarbon content of the BC component and Δ14Cff is −1000 ‰ by definition because fossil carbon is completely depleted in radiocarbon (Li et al., 2016). Δ14Cbb endmembers used in this equation are usually between +70 ‰ and +225 ‰, depending on the type and age of the burned biomass (Winiger et al., 2015; Barrett et al., 2015; Li et al., 2016). The former value corresponds to freshly produced biomass, such as crop and grass. The latter value reflects the burning of wood, which has accumulated over a life span that is decades to centuries long. A different choice of the Δ14Cbb endmember is one of the uncertainties associated with this source apportionment method. The uncertainty of ±25 ‰ translates to <5 % in the resulting fbb estimate (Winiger et al., 2016). Another uncertainty stems from the method of isolating BC from total carbon in sampled particles, as described by Zhang et al., 2012. They found that the isolation method prior to thermal treatments, thermal-optical methods and the heating protocols is important to the isolation of BC and organic carbon and the following isotope analysis. They found that different protocols of the thermal-optical method lead to a ∼30 % difference of estimated fbb values.

4 Results and discussions

GEOS-Chem captures the probability density function (PDF) of annual BC concentrations at sites in the US, Europe, China and the Arctic (see site description in Qi et al., 2017b) but overestimates the frequency of low BC concentrations (Fig. S1a). About 30 % of the simulated annual BC concentration in air is underestimated by a factor of 2 (Fig. S1b). The model reproduces the PDF of BC concentration in snow preferably (correlation coefficient r=0.98; Fig. S2a). The simulated median BC concentrations in snow in various regions agree with observations within a factor of 2, except in the region NC_Northeast Border (Fig. S2b), where the model overestimates the observed BC concentration in snow by a factor of 3 due to the overestimate of local emissions in that region (Qi et al., 2017b).

4.1 Contribution of biomass burning to BC in various regions

The GEOS-Chem-simulated mean atmospheric fbb in each region agrees with observations within a factor of 2, except in Europe, where fbb is underestimated by 63 % (Fig. 1a). The low bias of fbb in Europe occurs in non-summer seasons (observation: 45 %; model: 13 %), which is partly due to the underestimate of biofuel combustion for domestic heating by Fernandes et al. (2007) in most of the European regions during cold seasons (Herich et al., 2011). In southern (S) Asia, mean atmospheric fbb is overestimated by 50 %, mostly from the 90 % overestimate of fbb at Delhi (observation: 28 %; model: 52 %). At this site, atmospheric fbb values in spring and summer are overestimated by 100 % and 200 %, respectively. In North America, the model overestimates fbb at Salt Lake City (SLC) and Mexico City by a factor of 2. Possible reasons for the overestimate are explained in Sect. 4.2.1. In the Arctic and eastern (E) Asia, the model reproduces the observed fbb values within 3 % and 7 %, respectively. In addition, GEOS-Chem underestimates the large variations of fbb values (horizontal lines in Fig. 1a) in every region (except in the Arctic) due to the coarse horizontal and vertical resolutions.

https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/19/11545/2019/acp-19-11545-2019-f01

Figure 1Observed and GEOS-Chem-simulated fraction of biomass burning (fbb; %) of (a) BC in the atmosphere in the Arctic, southern Asia, North America, Europe, eastern Asia and the Himalayan–Tibetan Plateau (the regions are symbol and color coded; see data in Table S2) and (b) BC in snow during monsoon (red) and non-monsoon (black) seasons over the Himalayan–Tibetan Plateau. Also shown in panel (a) are the standard deviations of observed and model simulated fbb in each region, reflecting the temporal and spatial variations of fbb in the region (horizontal and vertical lines). Observations of fbb in the atmosphere in panel (a) are from carbon isotope analysis as listed in Table S1. Observations of fbb in BC in snow in panel (b) are from Li et al. (2016). Solid lines in panels (a) and (b) are 1 : 1 ratio lines, and dashed lines are 1 : 2 (or 2 : 1) ratio lines.

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Over the Himalayan–Tibetan Plateau, observations show that biomass burning dominates BC deposited in snow (64 %), but its contribution in the atmosphere is much less (39 %; Li et al., 2016). GEOS-Chem reproduces the average fbb in snow (model: 63 %) but overpredicts the average atmospheric fbb (model: 62 %) by 56 %. GEOS-Chem-simulated fbb values of BC deposition in snow at all sites over the Himalayan–Tibetan Plateau agree with observations within 40 % during both monsoon (June–August) and non-monsoon seasons (Fig. 1b), suggesting that the model captures the spatial and temporal variations of fbb in BC deposition in this region. The overestimate of the atmospheric fbb is mainly from the 130 % overestimate of fbb during the monsoon season (observation: 29 %; model: 67 %). Possible reasons for the overestimate are discussed in Sect. 4.2.1.

4.2 Temporal and spatial variations of fbb in different regions

4.2.1 Temporal variation of fbb

In the Arctic at Abisko, observed fbb ranges from the fall and wintertime low of 31 % to the summer high of 59 % (Fig. 2a) due to the large contribution from open fires in Europe in summer (Winiger et al., 2016). The model also shows a peak in fbb in summer, but the seasonal variation is relatively flat (from 23 % in winter to 27 % in summer). We attribute the discrepancy to two reasons. First, fbb values of emissions at the site lack seasonal variations, as shown in Fig. 2a. Second, the coarse resolution does not solve the vortex structure of the low-pressure and frontal systems, which is important for poleward transport of BC (Ma et al., 2014; Sato et al., 2016). At Barrow (Fig. 2b), observed fbb values show two peaks in summer (34 %) and winter (37 %), while modeled fbb shows a single strong peak in summer (78 %). In summer, the magnitude and variations of fbb in the atmosphere are similar to those of fbb in local emissions, suggesting that the atmospheric fbb is largely determined by local emissions. The 129 % overestimate of fbb is largely due to the overestimate of local open burning emissions. In spring, fall and winter, the modeled atmospheric fbb values are much larger than the fbb of local emissions, indicating a large contribution from long-range transport.

https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/19/11545/2019/acp-19-11545-2019-f02

Figure 2Seasonal variations of observed (light coral bars) and GEOS-Chem-simulated (light blue bars) fbb of BC in the atmosphere at (a) Abisko and (b) Barrow in the Arctic, (c) Bode and (d) Lumbini over the Himalayan–Tibetan Plateau, (e) Salt Lake City in North America, (f) Tokyo in eastern Asia, and (g) MCOH and (h) SINH in southern Asia. The white bars are fbb values of BC emissions in the model grid (4 lat × 5 lon) of each site. Also shown are the standard deviations (error bars). Site locations are shown in Fig. S3.

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In contrast to the seasonal cycles of fbb at sites in the Arctic, at Bode (Fig. 2c) over the Himalayan–Tibetan Plateau, fbb values are the lowest in summer (observation: 17 %) and highest in winter (observation: 42 %; Li et al., 2016). The similar trend is observed at Lumbini (Fig. 2d), only with smaller amplitude (summer low: 42 %; spring high: 58 %; Li et al., 2016). The lower fbb in summer is because of several reasons. First, less biofuel is consumed for domestic heating in warmer seasons (Li et al., 2016). Second, the region is barely affected by open fires. Third, biomass-sourced BC is removed more efficiently by the frequent precipitation in summer both over the Himalayan–Tibetan Plateau and over the surrounding source regions, such as India and eastern Asia (Li et al., 2016). The GEOS-Chem-simulated atmospheric fbb values of BC at all sites over the Himalayan–Tibetan Plateau (results for Bode and Lumbini are shown in Fig. 2c and d, and the others are not shown) have weak or no seasonal variations. In addition, the model does not capture the observed increasing trend of fbb along the Mustang Valley and Langtang Valley. Possible reasons for the discrepancies are many. First, the fbb values of local emissions have no seasonal variations, as shown in Fig. 2c and d. Second, it is conceivable that the coarse model resolution of global models does not reproduce the complex topography and transport pathways of BC over the Himalayan–Tibetan Plateau (He et al., 2014). However, the mean modeled atmospheric fbb generally agrees with observations (within 60 %), and the modeled atmospheric fbb generally follows the fbb of local emissions across the whole plateau. These comparisons suggest that the atmospheric fbb over the Himalayan–Tibetan Plateau is largely determined by fbb in emissions in the region.

At the SLC (North America; Fig. 2e), Tokyo (eastern Asia; Fig. 2f), Maldives Climate Observatory in Hanimaadhoo (MCOH) and Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology in Sinhagad, India (SINH; southern Asia, Fig. 2g and h), sites, no big differences of fbb among seasons were observed (SLC: 8 %–13 %; Tokyo: 33 %–41 %; MCOH: 52 %–53 %; SINH: 48 %–56 %). However, BC concentrations show strong seasonal variations at the four sites, with high loadings in winter and low loadings in summer (Mouteva et al., 2017; Yamamoto et al., 2007; Budhavant et al., 2015). At SLC, the most significant local sources of PM2.5 particles are mobile emissions, which are relatively stable through the whole year (Mouteva et al., 2017). The second most important source is non-mobile sources with solid burning, mostly wood burning, which is not allowed to be used when air quality forecasts predict an inversion period (Mouteva et al., 2017). This restriction limits the extra use of solid fuels in winter, and thus limits their effects on BC concentrations and fbb in the atmosphere. So the higher concentration of BC in winter in SLC is largely determined by the low boundary-layer height (Mouteva et al., 2017). The model overestimates fbb at SLC in all seasons by a factor of 2–4 (Fig. 2e). As described in Mouteva et al. (2017), the observations were in an urban environment with strong influence from local emissions. However, modeled fbb in the atmosphere is much higher than the fbb values of local emissions based on emission inventories in this study (Sect. 2), suggesting that the modeled atmospheric fbb at the site is largely affected by the surrounding regions. The misrepresentation of the source region (local versus regional) is probably one reason for the large bias of modeled fbb against observations. At the Tokyo site in eastern Asia, the model reproduces both the magnitude and the seasonal variations of observed fbb. The much lower fbb value in emissions than in the atmosphere also indicates a regional effect. In southern Asia, GEOS-Chem reproduces the similar observed high fbb values at MOCH (summer: 52 %; winter: 53 %) and SINH (summer: 48; winter: 56 %) within 30 %. However, reasons for the high fbb values at the two sites are different. Since there are no local emissions at MCOH, fbb at the site is largely affected by long-range transport. In contrast, fbb in the atmosphere follows fbb in local emissions at SINH, suggesting that the atmospheric fbb at the site is mostly affected by local emissions. At MCOH the high fbb is probably from the large fbb in the outflow of Africa, while at SINH local burning of agricultural crop residues is the major source (Budhavant et al., 2015).

4.2.2 Spatial variation of modeled fbb

GEOS-Chem suggests that the Southern Hemisphere has a higher contribution from biomass burning both for BC in surface air (50±11 %) and in deposition (53±10 %, Fig. 3a and b). The high fbb values in S America and Australia are largely from active open fires (accounting for 48 % and 81 % of the total biomass burning contributions, respectively), while in Africa biofuel consumption is the major biomass burning source (model: 64±20 %; Fig. 3c and d). Because of the strong seasonal variations of open fire emissions, the highest fbb values in Africa, S America, the S Pacific, Australia and the Antarctic usually occur during September to November (58 %–71 %), and the lowest values are in March–May (32 %–56 %; Fig. S4).

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Figure 3Annual (a) fbb of BC in the atmosphere at surface, (b) fbb of BC deposition, (c) fraction of biofuel emissions and (d) fraction of open fire emissions. Data are averaged for 2007–2013. Also shown in panel (a) are regions discussed in the text: the Arctic (1), Canada (2), the US (3), Europe (4), Siberia (5), eastern (E) Asia (6), southern (S) Asia (7), southeastern (SE) Asia (8), Africa (9), S America (10), S Pacific (11), Australia (12) and the Antarctic (13).

In the Northern Hemisphere, the largest fbb values of both BC in the atmosphere (93±5 %) and in deposition (92±6 %) are in northern Congo, where biomass burning contribution dominates over fossil fuel emissions. southern Asia also shows large fbb values (54 % for BC in air and in deposition) due to large biofuel consumption. In other regions, such as Europe, Canada, the US, Siberia and the Arctic, fossil fuel contribution (65 %–80 %) is much larger than biomass burning. fbb values of BC in air and in deposition in different regions have different seasonal variations (Figs. S4–S5). Atmospheric fbb values in Canada, Siberia, the Arctic and the Antarctic have the strongest seasonal variations, with a peak in summer (49 %–70 %) because of the large fraction of open fire emissions (Figs. S6–S7). In the US, southern Europe, eastern Asia and southern Asia, seasonal variation of fbb is relatively flat, which is also shown by observations at a few sites (Fig. 2).

4.3 Uncertainty analysis

Atmospheric fbb is determined not only by emissions (fossil fuel combustion versus biomass burning) but also by atmospheric processes that affect the deposition during transport. We investigate the uncertainties associated with biofuel emissions, fbb in fresh emissions, the BC aging rate and size-resolved scavenging. We used relative change (r; %) to describe the change of fbb in each experiment (Exp.) relative to the standard simulation:

(2) r = f bb Exp . - f bb Std . / f bb Std . ,

where r is the relative change, [fbb]Exp. is fbb in each experiment and [fbb]Std. is the fbb in the standard simulation in each region.

4.3.1 Uncertainty associated with biofuel emissions

Biofuel emission estimates are associated with large uncertainties (Fernandes et al., 2007). Source apportionment of BC in Europe based on multi-wavelength aethalometer measurements showed that fbb in winter (24 %–33 %) is much higher than that in summer (2 %–10 %), suggesting that wood burning for domestic heating increases the fbb value in the atmosphere in winter significantly (Herich et al., 2011). In addition, Winiger et al. (2017) analyzed fbb based on carbon isotope measurements at Tiksi in Russia and suggested that domestic use (∼60 % of which is from biomass burning) accounted for 35 % of BC at the site, following transport (38 %). We find that during the cold season, mean fbb values in Europe and the Arctic (most sites are north of 45 N; Table S1) are underestimated by 68 % and 50 % in the standard simulation, probably due to the underestimate of domestic heating in winter. However, in eastern Asia (all sites are south of 45 N), mean fbb in winter is overestimated by 22 %. Thus, we doubled biofuel emissions from domestic heating north of 45 N during cold seasons in Experiment A (Exp. A) to investigate the uncertainty associated with biofuel emissions. It is conceivable that the largest effects occur in the northern four regions, including Europe, Siberia, Canada and the Arctic. As a result, fbb values increase by ∼30 % in Europe, Siberia and the Arctic and by 15 % in Canada in winter, which is larger than those in spring and fall (4 %–13 %; Fig. 4). Consequently, the low bias of fbb in Europe is reduced from −63 % to −54 %. This improvement suggests that the biofuel emissions at high latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere are probably too low in current bottom-up BC emission inventories, supporting previous estimates (Herich et al., 2011).

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Figure 4GEOS-Chem-simulated fractional change (r) to atmospheric fbb relative to the standard simulation, as a result of doubled biofuel emissions north of 45 N (Exp. A), 70 % of hydrophilic BC in freshly emitted biomass burning BC-containing particles (Exp. B), 4 h e-folding aging time of BC in biomass burning plumes and linear aging rate of 1 % in fossil fuel plumes (Exp. C), TOMAS microphysical aging and scavenging (Exp. D), and finer horizontal model resolution (2 lat × 2.5 lon; Exp. E), r=([fbb]Exp.-[fbb]Std.)/[fbb]Std., which varies with regions (see region definition in Fig. 3a) and seasons (a: March–May – MAM; b: June–August – JJA; c: September–November – SON; d: December–February – DJF), averaged for 2007–2013. See details of the standard simulation and the uncertainty experiments in the text.

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4.3.2 Uncertainty associated with hygroscopicity of BC in freshly emitted biomass burning plumes

Recent measurements find that in freshly emitted fossil fuel plumes, the fraction of thickly coated hydrophilic BC is  10 % (Moteki et al., 2007; Schwarz et al., 2008; Shiraiwa et al., 2007), while in biomass burning plumes the fraction reaches up to 70 % (Schwarz et al., 2008; Akagi et al., 2012). The higher hygroscopicity of BC in freshly emitted biomass burning plumes enhances the subsequent wet scavenging rate and thereby reduces fbb in the atmosphere. In the standard simulation, we assume that 20 % of freshly emitted BC particles are hydrophilic. We investigate the effects of the initial hygroscopicity of BC in fresh emissions on atmospheric fbb of BC in Exp. B by assuming that 70 % of freshly emitted BC particles from biomass burning are thickly coated and hydrophilic. The resulting fraction of hydrophilic BC in biomass burning plumes in the 12 regions increases by 0 %–20 % (varying with seasons and regions), lowering fbb in the atmosphere by up to 11 % in Canada in summer. The largest reduction of fbb shows in June–August (−7 % averaged for all regions; Fig. 4), when open fires are frequent and active globally (Giglio et al., 2013; van der Werf et al., 2010). During this time, the largest reductions are in Canada (−11 %) and Siberia (−10 %), where the fraction of hydrophilic BC in biomass burning plumes increases by a large fraction (11 %–13 %). In the S Pacific, the reduction of fbb is large (−10 %) as well because large precipitation (28 kg m−2 month−1) over this region removes more biomass burning BC particles in the outflow of S America. During September–November, the relative reduction of fbb in the Northern Hemisphere (−6 %) is much larger than that in the Southern Hemisphere (−1 %) because fbb values in the Southern Hemisphere are too large (Fig. S5). The changes of fbb values in other seasons in all regions are marginal.

4.3.3 Uncertainty associated with BC aging time

Mixing organic and inorganic particles with larger hygroscopicity, BC particles become more hydrophilic during the aging process (Bond et al., 2013). It is assumed that BC particles are converted from hydrophobic to hydrophilic with an e-folding time of 1.15 d after emission in the standard simulation (Park et al., 2005). However, observations showed that the fraction of thickly coated hydrophilic BC in urban fossil fuel plumes increases linearly with plume age (0.5 % h−1–2.3 % h−1, Moteki et al., 2007; Shiraiwa et al., 2007; Subramanian et al., 2010; McMeeking et al., 2011), while BC aging follows a logarithmic trend with an e-folding time of 4 h in biomass burning plumes (Akagi et al., 2012). The aging rates differ among plumes because of different BC sizes, co-emitted hygroscopic materials and oxidation capacities of the plumes (Bond et al., 2013). Thus, in Exp. C, we assume that fossil fuel combustion generated BC ages linearly with a rate of 1 % h−1, while BC from biomass burning plumes ages with an e-folding time of 4 h. This means that the fossil fuel plumes age slower than the standard simulation and are scavenged slower, while the biomass burning plumes age much faster and are removed from the atmosphere faster in precipitation. This aging scheme leads to a 0 %–24 % increase in the fraction of hydrophilic BC in the atmosphere, which reduces fbb by up to −14 %. The largest reduction of fbb is in the S Pacific in fall (MAM) and summer (DJF) in the Southern Hemisphere, followed by the Antarctic (−12 %) during MAM and the Arctic (−11 %) during SON. The reduction of fbb is larger in remote regions and smaller in source regions because it takes time for the different aging rates in fossil fuel and biomass burning plumes to affect the hygroscopicities of BC in the two plumes and the subsequent aging rates.

4.3.4 Uncertainty associated with size-resolved scavenging

BC particles emitted from biomass burning plumes are usually larger in size and thicker in coating thickness (Schwarz et al., 2008; Sahu et al., 2012), suggesting an easier removal from the atmosphere. For example, observations (Schwarz et al., 2008; Sahu et al., 2012) showed that the mass median diameter of BC particles in biomass burning plumes is 193 nm with a coating thickness of 65 nm, while in fossil fuel plumes, the mass median diameter and coating thickness are 175 and 20 nm. In addition, because of the different coating materials, hygroscopicities of BC-containing particles in the two kinds of plumes are different as well. The coating materials of BC in urban plumes are dominated by sulfate and followed by nitrate and primary and secondary organics (Shiraiwa et al., 2007), while in biomass burning plumes, the major coating materials are organics (Sahu et al., 2012). For ambient air, characteristic κ values of organics and inorganics are 0.1 (0.01–0.5) and 0.7 (0.5–1.4; Petters and Kreidenweis, 2007; Gunthe et al., 2011, and references therein). Higher hygroscopicity of BC in fossil fuel plumes suggests that they are easier to activate and serve as cloud condensation nuclei (CCNs) compared to BC particles in biomass burning plumes. The higher hygroscopicity and smaller size of BC particles in fossil fuel plumes have the opposite effect on their removal rate. Thus, we investigate the total effects of size-resolved scavenging in Exp. D; we use the TOMAS microphysics scheme to process the aging and wet scavenging of BC with different sizes from fossil fuel combustion and biomass burning. The mass median diameters of fossil fuel and biomass burning BC particles are assumed to be 160 and 200 nm, respectively. Size-resolved coagulation, condensation, nucleation and cloud processing are implemented. Coating materials included are sulfate, nitrate, sea-salt, organics and mineral dust. The size-resolved aging and scavenging scheme leads to a larger increase in the fraction of hydrophilic BC in fossil fuel plumes (by 16 %; 0 %–31 %, varying with regions) than in biomass burning plumes (by 12 %; 0 %–23 %). This increase in both fossil fuel and biomass burning plumes suggests that BC particles are removed faster in the size-resolved simulation than in the standard simulation with a bulk removal parameterization. The larger increase in the fraction of hydrophilic BC in fossil fuel plumes means that BC in fossil fuel plumes is removed faster than that in biomass burning plumes in the size-resolved simulation. This is probably because the total effect of higher hygroscopicity of coating materials and smaller size of BC in fossil fuel plumes enhances their removal. Thus atmospheric fbb increases in most regions during MAM (by 1 %–14 %), SON (by 0 %–7 %) and DJF (by 1 %–12 %). The most noticeable characteristic is that the increase in fbb in the Northern Hemisphere is larger than that in the Southern Hemisphere due to the large fraction of fossil fuel emissions in the Northern Hemisphere.

4.3.5 Uncertainty associated with model resolution

Finer model resolution is capable of reproducing small-scale meteorological conditions, which is critical to BC transport (Sato et al., 2016). We use horizontal resolution of 4 lat × 5 lon in the standard simulation and Exps. A–D because the size-resolved microphysical scheme TOMAS in Exp. D is computationally expensive. We investigate the uncertainty associated with model resolution in Exp. E by using a finer horizontal resolution of 2 lat × 2.5 lon (Fig. 4). We find that, relative to the standard simulation, fbb in Exp. E changes by −5 %–5 % in the 13 regions in all seasons. In most regions, the absolute change is smaller than or equal to the change in Exp. A–D, except in mid-latitude and tropical regions in Exp. A. Averaged over the whole globe, the relative change of fbb to the standard simulation is −1 %.

4.3.6 Other uncertainties

Carbon isotope measurements of BC sources are associated with large uncertainties. The thermal-optical protocol used for the carbon isotope measurements of BC produces ∼30 % difference of observed fbb values (Zhang et al., 2012), which is equal to or larger than the uncertainties of modeled fbb associated with biofuel emissions north of 45 N, the aging rate and wet scavenging discussed in Sect. 4.3.1–4.3.4. The comparison of the two sets of data in Sect. 4.1 and 4.2 is within a similar uncertainty range. In addition, we do not have carbon isotope measurements in the Southern Hemisphere to constrain the model results. Our analysis in this study is based only on model results.

In addition to the biofuel emissions discussed in Sect. 4.3.1, open fire emissions, particularly in the boreal regions, are associated with large uncertainties (Randerson et al., 2012). Konovalov et al. (2018) found that open burning emissions of Siberian fires during May to September from GFED4 is possibly underestimated by a factor of 2, constrained by satellite observations of the aerosol absorption optical depth and the aerosol extinction optical depth. However, we find that during the same season, mean atmospheric fbb at Tiksi in Russia is overestimated by 88 %, indicating that open burning emissions in this region from GFED4 are possibly overestimated. This contradiction suggests that further studies are needed to better constrain the open burning emissions in boreal regions. In addition, the global fossil fuel (Bond et al., 2007) and biofuel emission inventory (Fernandes et al., 2007) used in this study are for the year 2000, and the emissions in Asia (Li et al., 2017) are for the year 2010. We estimated the fbb from 2007 to 2013 using these constant inventories and varying open burning emissions from GFED4. The lack of inter-annual variations of BC fossil fuel and biofuel emissions also produces uncertainties, but it is difficult to quantify based on current knowledge.

5 Conclusions

This study sought to understand the relative contribution of fossil fuel combustion and biomass burning to global BC. We used GEOS-Chem (v11-01) driven by MERRA2 assimilated meteorological fields to simulate BC concentration from fossil fuel and biomass burning. The source apportionment results were expressed as the fraction of BC from biomass burning (fbb). Simulated fbb was validated against carbon isotope measurements of BC in the atmosphere at 65 stations across the Northern Hemisphere and for 11 snow samples over the Himalayan–Tibetan Plateau. We also investigated the uncertainties of fbb associated with biofuel emissions, the fraction of hydrophilic BC in fresh emissions, aging time and size-resolved scavenging.

The model reproduced the mean observed atmospheric fbb in various regions and in snow over the Himalayan–Tibetan Plateau within a factor of 2. Generally, values of atmospheric fbb were larger in remote regions (33±14 % in the Arctic, 39±17 % over the Himalayan–Tibetan Plateau and 36±16 % in southern Asia) than those in urban regions (13±4 % in North America), indicating a larger contribution from biofuel and open burning sources in rural, developing and remote regions. fbb was higher in summer (59 %–78 %, varying with regions) than in winter (28 %–32 %, varying with regions) in the Arctic, while it was higher in winter (42 %–58 %, varying with regions) and lower in summer (16 %–42 %, varying with regions) over the Himalayan–Tibetan Plateau. The simulated amplitudes of the seasonal variations were much smaller in the two regions. The seasonal variation was observed to be relatively flat in North America, eastern and southern Asia. The simulated monthly mean fbb values in these regions agree with observations by −45 %–275 %. The Southern Hemisphere had a higher atmospheric fbb than the Northern Hemisphere (SH: 50±11 %; NH: 35±14 %) due to the large fraction of open burning emissions in S America and Australia and large fraction of biofuel consumption in Africa. In the Northern Hemisphere, the highest fbb was in S Asia (54±10 %), followed by E Asia (41±13 %), due to large biofuel consumption. In other regions, such as Europe, Canada, the US, Siberia and the Arctic, fbb values are small (20 %–35 %, varying with regions).

Simulated fbb was associated with uncertainties from all processes, including emissions, aging and deposition processes. We found that doubled biofuel emissions used for domestic heating north of 45 N resulted in a ∼30 % increase in fbb in Europe, Siberia and the Arctic and a 15 % increase in Canada in winter. This increase reduced the discrepancy of fbb against observations from −63 % to −54 % in Europe, suggesting that the biofuel emissions at high latitudes were underestimated by the bottom-up emission inventories. Using a higher fraction of hydrophilic BC in fresh biomass burning plumes (uncertainty simulation: 70 %, standard simulation: 20 %) resulted in a reduction of fbb in summer by −2 % to −11 %, with the largest reduction in Canada and Siberia, where open fires were frequent. In the standard simulation, it was assumed that BC in both fossil fuel and biomass burning plumes aged following an e-folding time of 1.15 d. In the uncertainty simulation, we used a 4 h e-folding lifetime for BC in biomass burning plumes and a linear aging rate of 1 % for BC in fossil fuel plumes. This led to a reduction of fbb of up to −14 % in the atmosphere. The largest reduction was in the S Pacific in fall (MAM) and summer (DJF) in the Southern Hemisphere. The reductions in the Antarctic (−12 %) and the Arctic (−11 %) were also large in fall, when there were large open fires in the Southern Hemisphere, and at high latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere. The size-resolved aging and scavenging scheme led to a larger increase in the fraction of hydrophilic BC in fossil fuel plumes (by 16 %; 0 %–31 %) than in biomass burning plumes (by 12 %; 0 %–23 %). Thus atmospheric fbb increased in most regions during MAM (by 1 %–14 %), SON (by 0 %–7 %) and DJF (by 1 %–12 %). Using finer model resolution produced −5 %–5 % relative change of atmospheric fbb in the various regions, equal to or smaller than the change caused by atmospheric processes.

This study showed that local emissions had a larger effect on atmospheric fbb than other atmospheric processes. As discussed in Sect. 1, most previous studies compared measured atmospheric fbb directly with fbb in local emissions. We confirmed this assumption but suggested considering the uncertainties associated with aging and scavenging (up to 14 %). In addition, a ∼30 % difference of isotope-based measurements of fbb caused by the thermal-optical protocols in measuring BC should also be considered.

This study has important implications for estimating radiative forcing of global BC. Previous studies (Healy et al., 2015, and references therein) showed that BC-containing particles in open fires had no optical lensing effect. Considering the large contribution from biomass burning in S Asia, SE Asia and in the Southern Hemisphere as suggested in this study, the inclusion of lensing-related absorption enhancement in climate models for BC from both fossil fuel combustion and biomass burning sources may lead to an overestimate of the radiative forcing of global BC. Measurements of the optical properties of BC particles from different sources (fossil fuel versus biomass burning) in different regions are needed to better constrain its radiative forcing.

Data availability

The data used in this study are available from the corresponding author upon request (shxwang@tsinghua.edu.cn).

Supplement

The supplement related to this article is available online at: https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-19-11545-2019-supplement.

Author contributions

LQ and SW designed the experiments. LQ performed the simulations. LQ prepared the paper, with contributions from SW.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by Key Projects of National Key Research and Development Program of the Ministry of Science and Technology of China (2017YFC0213005), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (21625701 and 21806088), and the National Research Program for Key Issues in Air Pollution Control (DQGG0301 and DQGG0303). We thank the two reviewers for their constructive comments on the paper.

Financial support

This research has been supported by Key Projects of National Key Research and Development Program of the Ministry of Science and Technology of China (grant no. 2017YFC0213005), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant nos. 21625701 and 21806088), and the National Research Program for Key Issues in Air Pollution Control (grant nos. DQGG0301 and DQGG0303).

Review statement

This paper was edited by Aijun Ding and reviewed by two anonymous referees.

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Short summary
Black carbon (BC) contributes two-thirds of the climate impact of carbon dioxide, pushing methane into third place of the human contributors to global warming. This study shows that contributions from biomass burning (producing marginal lensing effect) have a strong spatial variation, from 20 % in Europe to 60 % in Africa. Thus, the inclusion of strong lensing-related absorption enhancement to all BC particles in previous estimates may lead to overestimating their positive radiative forcing.
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