Structural changes of CAST soot during a thermal-optical measurement protocol

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Abstract

Thermal-optical measurement techniques are widely used to classify carbonaceous material. The results of different methods for total carbon are comparable but can vary by >44% for elemental carbon. One major cause of variation is the formation of pyrolyzed carbon during the heating process which occurs mainly in samples with a high amount of brown carbon (BrC). In this study the structural changes of two different CAST (combustion aerosol standard) aerosol samples caused by the heating procedure in a thermal-optical instrument were investigated with UV-VIS and Raman spectroscopy, the integrating-sphere technique (IS) and transmission electron microscopy. All analysis techniques showed significant structural changes for BrC-rich samples at the highest temperature level (870°C) in helium. The structure of the heated BrC-rich sample resembles the structure of an unheated BrC-poor sample. Heating the BrC-rich sample to 870°C increases the graphitic domain size within the material from 1.6 to 2nm. Although the Raman spectra unambiguously show this increase in ordering only at the highest temperature step, UV-VIS and IS analyses show a continuous change in the optical properties also at lower temperatures. The sample with a negligible amount of BrC, however, did not show any significant structural changes during the whole heating procedure.

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Haller, T., Rentenberger, C., Meyer, J. C., Felgitsch, L., Grothe, H., & Hitzenberger, R. (2019). Structural changes of CAST soot during a thermal-optical measurement protocol. Atmospheric Measurement Techniques, 12(7), 3503–3519. https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-12-3503-2019

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