Title: Modelling Biomass Burning Emissions and their Optical Properties
1Modelling Biomass BurningEmissions and their
Optical Properties
School of Earth Environment Institute for
Atmospheric Science
- David Ridley
- Ken Carslaw, Martyn Chipperfield, Graham Mann
2What is Biomass Burning?
- Burning of vegetation for fuel, to clear land,
remove crop debris, or to perform rituals. - Estimated to be 90 anthropogenic
- 32 - Forests (20 of this is replanted)
- 60 - Grasslands
- 8 - Croplands
3Climatic Effects
- Warming due to release of greenhouse gases
- Biomass burning releases gases (e.g., CO2, CO,
CH4, NOx, SO2, C2H6, C2H4, C3H8, C3H6) - A third of all anthropogenic CO2 emissions are
from biomass burning - Totally global forcing of roughly 0.5Wm-2
4Climatic Effects
- Cooling due to release of aerosol - Black Carbon
(BC), Particulate Organic Matter (POM)
- Increase in aerosol reduces light reaching the
surface (Direct Effect) - -0.1 to -0.6Wm-2 global forcing due to biomass
burning (IPCC, 2001) - Increased aerosol can increase cloud brightness
and reduce rainfall (Indirect Effects) - -0.1 to -0.4Wm-2 forcing due to biomass burning
globally (Jacobson, 2004) - Black carbon particles can have a warming effect
upon atmosphere (Semi-Direct Effect) - ??Wm-2 to ??Wm-2 very hard to constrain
5Locations
- Primarily occurs in South America, Africa and
Indonesia
J. Heintzenberg
Direct Radiative Forcing
6UKCA Optical Depth
- Model currently under-predicts AOD
- Why?
MODIS AOD Oct 2000
UKCA AOD Oct 2000
7Modelling Optical Depth
- Factors affecting reproduction of observed AOD
over source - Mass of Emissions
- Injection Height
- Emission Size Distribution
- Aerosol Aging
- Wet Deposition
- Spatial Temporal Variability
8Determining Emissions
- Location and Properties of Fire Emissions
- Identifying location and duration of fire
- Satellite detection of fires and burnt areas
- Estimating amount and biome type of the burnt
biomass (available fuel load) - Climatological Biomass Maps and NDVI from
satellite - Choosing the right specific species emission
factors and injection height for the detected
fire - In-situ concentration measurements (Andreae and
Merlet, 2001)
(Liousse, C. et al., 2004).
9Emissions Databases
- GFED
- 1x1deg, Monthly and Climatological Averages
- Uses ATSR fire detection
- Emission heights from Olsen vegetation map
(Lavoue thesis, 2004) - RETRO
- 0.5x0.5deg, monthly average
- Uses MODIS fire detection
- No emission heights
10Emissions Database Comparison
- Significant variability in location and magnitude
of emissions
Testing of the effect of different databases and
injection heights upon AOD and aerosol size
distribution to be conducted
11Injection Size
- Model currently assumes injection size of 75nm
radius
2nd biomass mode
Observations (Haywood, 2003) suggest 100nm may be
more appropriate for a modal scheme
12Emission Size Distribution
- Comparison with AERONET size distributions show
lack of AOD is primarily due to accumulation mode
aerosol
70nm
100nm
- Increasing BC/OC effective radius by x1.75 and
number by x3 required - Suggests large under-estimation of mass! (or
water uptake)
13Emission Size Distribution
- Knowing mass of aerosol is not enough to
determine AOD - Size of aerosol has substantial effect upon AOD
even when mass is held constant
14Modelling Optical Depth
- Factors affecting reproduction of observed AOD
over source - Mass of Emissions
- Injection Height
- Emission Size Distribution
- Aerosol Aging
- Wet Deposition
- Spatial Temporal Variability
15Aerosol Aging
- Water uptake important in AOD
- BC OC initially insoluble but become more
soluble over time - Altering solubility within reasonable limits
give large change in AOD - No direct effect upon number concentration
only size
0 Soluble
10 Soluble
20 Soluble
16Wet Deposition I
- Too much aerosol may be rained-out in the model
- Model rainfall much more intense than observed,
but spatial distribution OK over region of
interest i.e. very little rain
FEWS Rainfall
Model Rainfall
17Wet Deposition II
- Efficiency of nucleation scavenging reduced from
99.9 to 50 - Change of around 0.05 in AOD not sufficient to
explain discrepancy
99.9
50
18Modelling Optical Depth
- Factors affecting reproduction of observed AOD
over source - Mass of Emissions
- Injection Height
- Emission Size Distribution
- Aerosol Aging
- Wet Deposition
- Spatial Temporal Variability
19Summary
- Several important factors influencing biomass
AOD in model - Discrepancies in spatial distribution of
aerosol - Likely to be due to emission number conc. rather
than wet dep. - Effect of injection height to be investigated
may affect aerosol number concentration - Will be quantified using different emissions
databases - Size of emissions important!
- Can cause doubling of AOD in heavily polluted
regions (even when mass is held constant) - Will be constrained using in-situ data to
initiate emissions sizes - Hygroscopicity important
- Crude test shows assumptions of BC/OC aging
affect AOD by 25-75 (depending on initial size)