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Dive into the research topics where Swarup China is active.

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Featured researches published by Swarup China.


Nature Communications | 2013

Morphology and mixing state of individual freshly emitted wildfire carbonaceous particles

Swarup China; Claudio Mazzoleni; Kyle Gorkowski; A. C. Aiken; Manvendra K. Dubey

Biomass burning is one of the largest sources of carbonaceous aerosols in the atmosphere, significantly affecting earth’s radiation budget and climate. Tar balls, abundant in biomass burning smoke, absorb sunlight and have highly variable optical properties, typically not accounted for in climate models. Here we analyse single biomass burning particles from the Las Conchas fire (New Mexico, 2011) using electron microscopy. We show that the relative abundance of tar balls (80%) is 10 times greater than soot particles (8%). We also report two distinct types of tar balls; one less oxidized than the other. Furthermore, the mixing of soot particles with other material affects their optical, chemical and physical properties. We quantify the morphology of soot particles and classify them into four categories: ~50% are embedded (heavily coated), ~34% are partly coated, ~12% have inclusions and~4% are bare. Inclusion of these observations should improve climate model performances.


Nature Communications | 2015

Enhanced light absorption by mixed source black and brown carbon particles in UK winter

Shang Liu; A. C. Aiken; Kyle Gorkowski; Manvendra K. Dubey; Christopher D. Cappa; Leah R. Williams; Scott C. Herndon; Paola Massoli; Edward Charles Fortner; P. S. Chhabra; W. A. Brooks; Timothy B. Onasch; John T. Jayne; Douglas R. Worsnop; Swarup China; Noopur Sharma; Claudio Mazzoleni; Lu Xu; Nga L. Ng; Dantong Liu; J. D. Allan; James Lee; Zoe L. Fleming; Claudia Mohr; Peter Zotter; Sönke Szidat; André S. H. Prévôt

Black carbon (BC) and light-absorbing organic carbon (brown carbon, BrC) play key roles in warming the atmosphere, but the magnitude of their effects remains highly uncertain. Theoretical modelling and laboratory experiments demonstrate that coatings on BC can enhance BCs light absorption, therefore many climate models simply assume enhanced BC absorption by a factor of ∼1.5. However, recent field observations show negligible absorption enhancement, implying models may overestimate BCs warming. Here we report direct evidence of substantial field-measured BC absorption enhancement, with the magnitude strongly depending on BC coating amount. Increases in BC coating result from a combination of changing sources and photochemical aging processes. When the influence of BrC is accounted for, observationally constrained model calculations of the BC absorption enhancement can be reconciled with the observations. We conclude that the influence of coatings on BC absorption should be treated as a source and regionally specific parameter in climate models.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Morphology and mixing state of aged soot particles at a remote marine free troposphere site: Implications for optical properties

Swarup China; Barbara Scarnato; R. C. Owen; Bo Zhang; M. T. Ampadu; Sumit Kumar; Katja Dzepina; M. P. Dziobak; Paulo Fialho; Judith A. Perlinger; Jacques Hueber; Detlev Helmig; Lynn Mazzoleni; Claudio Mazzoleni

The radiative properties of soot particles depend on their morphology and mixing state, but their evolution during transport is still elusive. Here we report observations from an electron microscopy analysis of individual particles transported in the free troposphere over long distances to the remote Pico Mountain Observatory in the Azores in the North Atlantic. Approximately 70% of the soot particles were highly compact and of those 26% were thinly coated. Discrete dipole approximation simulations indicate that this compaction results in an increase in soot single scattering albedo by a factor of ≤2.17. The top of the atmosphere direct radiative forcing is typically smaller for highly compact than mass-equivalent lacy soot. The forcing estimated using Mie theory is within 12% of the forcing estimated using the discrete dipole approximation for a high surface albedo, implying that Mie calculations may provide a reasonable approximation for compact soot above remote marine clouds.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Soot superaggregates from flaming wildfires and their direct radiative forcing

Rajan K. Chakrabarty; Nicholas D. Beres; Hans Moosmüller; Swarup China; Claudio Mazzoleni; Manvendra K. Dubey; Li Liu; Michael I. Mishchenko

Wildfires contribute significantly to global soot emissions, yet their aerosol formation mechanisms and resulting particle properties are poorly understood and parameterized in climate models. The conventional view holds that soot is formed via the cluster-dilute aggregation mechanism in wildfires and emitted as aggregates with fractal dimension Df ≈ 1.8 mobility diameter Dm ≤ 1 μm, and aerodynamic diameter Da ≤ 300 nm. Here we report the ubiquitous presence of soot superaggregates (SAs) in the outflow from a major wildfire in India. SAs are porous, low-density aggregates of cluster-dilute aggregates with characteristic Df ≈ 2.6, Dm > 1 μm, and Da ≤ 300 nm that form via the cluster-dense aggregation mechanism. We present additional observations of soot SAs in wildfire smoke-laden air masses over Northern California, New Mexico, and Mexico City. We estimate that SAs contribute, per unit optical depth, up to 35% less atmospheric warming than freshly-emitted (Df ≈ 1.8) aggregates, and ≈90% more warming than the volume-equivalent spherical soot particles simulated in climate models.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2014

Effect of traffic and driving characteristics on morphology of atmospheric soot particles at freeway on-ramps.

Swarup China; Neila Salvadori; Claudio Mazzoleni

Vehicles represent a major source of soot in urban environments. Knowledge of the morphology and mixing of soot particles is fundamental to understand their potential health and climatic impacts. We investigate 5738 single particles collected at six different cloverleaf freeway on-ramps in Southern Michigan, using 2D images from scanning electron microscopy. Of those, 3364 particles are soot. We present an analysis of the morphological and mixing properties of those soot particles. The relative abundance of soot particles shows a positive association with traffic density (number of vehicles per minute). A classification of the mixing state of freshly emitted soot particles shows that most of them are bare (or thinly coated) (72%) and some are partly coated (22%). We find that the fractal dimension of soot particles (one of the most relevant morphological descriptors) varies from site to site, and increases with increasing vehicle specific power that represents the driving/engine load conditions, and with increasing percentage of vehicles older than 15 years. Our results suggest that driving conditions, and vehicle age and type have significant influence on the morphology of soot particles.


Reviews in Analytical Chemistry | 2016

Progress in the Analysis of Complex Atmospheric Particles

Alexander Laskin; Mary K. Gilles; Daniel A. Knopf; Bingbing Wang; Swarup China

This article presents an overview of recent advances in field and laboratory studies of atmospheric particles formed in processes of environmental air-surface interactions. The overarching goal of these studies is to advance predictive understanding of atmospheric particle composition, particle chemistry during aging, and their environmental impacts. The diversity between chemical constituents and lateral heterogeneity within individual particles adds to the chemical complexity of particles and their surfaces. Once emitted, particles undergo transformation via atmospheric aging processes that further modify their complex composition. We highlight a range of modern analytical approaches that enable multimodal chemical characterization of particles with both molecular and lateral specificity. When combined, these approaches provide a comprehensive arsenal of tools for understanding the nature of particles at air-surface interactions and their reactivity and transformations with atmospheric aging. We discuss applications of these novel approaches in recent studies and highlight additional research areas to explore the environmental effects of air-surface interactions.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2016

Ice nucleation activity of diesel soot particles at cirrus relevant temperature conditions: Effects of hydration, secondary organics coating, soot morphology, and coagulation: Ice Nucleation of Soot Particles

Gourihar Kulkarni; Swarup China; Shang Liu; Manjula I. Nandasiri; Noopur Sharma; Jacqueline Wilson; A. C. Aiken; Duli Chand; Alexander Laskin; Claudio Mazzoleni; Mikhail S. Pekour; John E. Shilling; V. Shutthanandan; Alla Zelenyuk; Rahul A. Zaveri

Ice formation by diesel soot particles was investigated at temperatures ranging from −40 to −50°C. Size-selected soot particles were physically and chemically aged in an environmental chamber, and their ice nucleating properties were determined using a continuous flow diffusion type ice nucleation chamber. Bare (freshly formed), hydrated, and compacted soot particles, as well as α-pinene secondary organic aerosol (SOA)-coated soot particles at high relative humidity conditions, showed ice formation activity at subsaturation conditions with respect to water but below the homogeneous freezing threshold conditions. However, SOA-coated soot particles at dry conditions were observed to freeze at homogeneous freezing threshold conditions. Overall, our results suggest that heterogeneous ice nucleation activity of freshly emitted diesel soot particles are sensitive to some of the aging processes that soot can undergo in the atmosphere.


Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | 2014

A Technique to Measure Ice Nuclei in the Contact Mode

Joseph Niehaus; K. W. Bunker; Swarup China; Alexander B. Kostinski; Claudio Mazzoleni; Will Cantrell

AbstractThis study presents a new technique to study ice nucleation by aerosols in the contact mode. Contact freezing depends upon the interaction of a supercooled droplet of water and an aerosol particle, with the caveat that the particle must be at the air–water interface. To measure nucleation catalyzed in this mode, the technique employs water droplets that are supercooled via a temperature-controlled copper stage, then pulls aerosol-laden air past them. Particles deposit out of the airstream and come into contact with the surface of the droplet. The probability that a particle–droplet collision initiates a freezing event, necessitating knowledge of the total number of particles that collide with the droplet, is reported. In tests of the technique, ice nucleation by the bacteria Pseudomonas syringae is found to be more efficient in the contact mode than in the immersion mode by two orders of magnitude at −3°C with the difference diminishing by −8°C.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016

Direct observation of ice nucleation events on individual atmospheric particles

Bingbing Wang; Daniel A. Knopf; Swarup China; Bruce W. Arey; Tristan H. Harder; Mary K. Gilles; Alexander Laskin

Heterogeneous ice nucleation is a physical chemistry process of critical relevance to a range of topics in the fundamental and applied sciences and technologies. Heterogeneous ice nucleation remains insufficiently understood, partially due to the lack of experimental methods capable of obtaining in situ microscopic details of ice formation over nucleating substrates or particles. We present microscopic observations of ice nucleation events on kaolinite particles at the nanoscale and demonstrate the capability of direct tracking and micro-spectroscopic characterization of individual ice nucleating particles (INPs) in an authentic atmospheric sample. This approach utilizes a custom-built ice nucleation cell, interfaced with an Environmental Scanning Electron Microscope (IN-ESEM platform) operated at temperatures and relative humidities relevant for heterogeneous ice nucleation. The IN-ESEM platform allows dynamic observations of individual ice formation events over particles in isobaric and isothermal experiments. Isothermal experiments on individual kaolinite particles demonstrate that ice crystals preferably nucleate at the edges of the stacked kaolinite platelets, rather than on their basal planes. These experimental observations of the location of ice nucleation provide direct information for further theoretical chemistry predictions of ice formation on kaolinite.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2016

Ice nucleation activity of diesel soot particles at Cirrus relevant conditions: Effects of hydration, secondary organics coating, hydration, soot morphology, and coagulation

Gourihar Kulkarni; Swarup China; Shang Liu; Manjula I. Nandasiri; Noopur Sharma; Jacqueline Wilson; A. C. Aiken; Duli Chand; Alexander Laskin; Claudio Mazzoleni; Mikhail S. Pekour; John E. Shilling; V. Shutthanandan; Alla Zelenyuk; Rahul A. Zaveri

Ice formation by diesel soot particles was investigated at temperatures ranging from −40 to −50°C. Size-selected soot particles were physically and chemically aged in an environmental chamber, and their ice nucleating properties were determined using a continuous flow diffusion type ice nucleation chamber. Bare (freshly formed), hydrated, and compacted soot particles, as well as α-pinene secondary organic aerosol (SOA)-coated soot particles at high relative humidity conditions, showed ice formation activity at subsaturation conditions with respect to water but below the homogeneous freezing threshold conditions. However, SOA-coated soot particles at dry conditions were observed to freeze at homogeneous freezing threshold conditions. Overall, our results suggest that heterogeneous ice nucleation activity of freshly emitted diesel soot particles are sensitive to some of the aging processes that soot can undergo in the atmosphere.

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Lynn Mazzoleni

Michigan Technological University

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Manvendra K. Dubey

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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Katja Dzepina

Michigan Technological University

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Paulo Fialho

University of the Azores

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Sumit Kumar

Michigan Technological University

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M. P. Dziobak

Michigan Technological University

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Noopur Sharma

Michigan Technological University

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R. C. Owen

Michigan Technological University

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