Humidity-dependent optical properties of fine particles during the Big Bend Regional Aerosol and Visibility Observational Study

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Abstract

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and National Park Service (NPS) initiated a comprehensive field experiment called The Big Bend Regional Aerosol and Visibility Observational Study (BRAVO) to investigate the source of visibility-reducing aerosols at Big Bend National Park, Texas. The study was carried out over a period of 4 months starting in the first week of July 1999. One objective of the study was to gain insight into the atmospheric light-scattering properties of ambient aerosols, especially as they relate to their hygroscopicity. This paper will report on comparisons between measured and modeled estimations of dry and ambient scattering and comparisons between measured and modeled ratios of wet and dry scattering, f(RH), as a function of relative humidity (RH). Two equilibrium models, exercised in combination with Mie scattering theory, were used to predict atmospheric aerosol water content and associated increase in atmospheric scattering. Modeled and measured deliquescence and crystallization points were also compared. Measured and modeled deliquescence were always within 10% RH while crystallization RHs were always within a few percentage points. The analysis suggests that on most days some water is retained by the aerosol at low RHs (20-30%) and in most cases the hygroscopic growth of only inorganic salts accounted for all the observed increase in scattering as a function of RH.

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Malm, W. C., Day, D. E., Kreidenweiss, S. M., Collett, J. L., & Lee, T. (2003). Humidity-dependent optical properties of fine particles during the Big Bend Regional Aerosol and Visibility Observational Study. Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 108(9). https://doi.org/10.1029/2002jd002998

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