Growing
evidence indicates that organic aerosol (OA) is a significant
absorber of solar radiation. Such absorptive OA is known as “brown
carbon” (BrC). However, a formal analytical method for BrC
is currently lacking although several methods have been applied to
determine its absorption properties. Reported imaginary refractive
index (k
OA) values from various combustion
sources span 2 orders of magnitude. Measurement methods are an important
factor affecting this k
OA variation. In
this work, isolated OA from wood pyrolysis was used to compare four
methods to determine absorbing properties of OA. The generated aerosol
was lognormally distributed, spherical, and nearly pure organic matter.
Optical closure was considered as the reference method. k
OA calculated from the extract bulk light absorbance measurement
was comparable to that determined by optical closure. k
OA and mass absorption cross section obtained by online
and offline filter-based transmission measurements were similar, but
3.5 to 5.0 times greater than those determined by optical closure.
Absorption Ångström Exponents determined by the four methods
were comparable and ranged from 6.1 to 6.8. A clear-sky radiative
transfer model implied that using the optical parameters derived from
different methods in the full climate model could produce different
radiative impacts of primary OA emissions.
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