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Featured researches published by Ted J. Christian.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2003

Comprehensive laboratory measurements of biomass‐burning emissions: 1. Emissions from Indonesian, African, and other fuels

Ted J. Christian; B. Kleiss; Robert J. Yokelson; R. Holzinger; Paul J. Crutzen; Wei Min Hao; Bambang Hero Saharjo; Darold E. Ward

Trace gas and particle emissions were measured from 47 laboratory fires burning 16 regionally to globally significant fuel types. Instrumentation included the following: open-path Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy; proton transfer reaction mass spectrometry; filter sampling with subsequent analysis of particles with diameter <2.5 μm for organic and elemental carbon and other elements; and canister sampling with subsequent analysis by gas chromatography (GC)/flame ionization detector, GC/electron capture detector, and GC/mass spectrometry. The emissions of 26 compounds are reported by fuel type. The results include the first detailed measurements of the emissions from Indonesian fuels. Carbon dioxide, CO, CH 4 , NH 3 , HCN, methanol, and acetic acid were the seven most abundant emissions (in order) from burning Indonesian peat. Acetol (hydroxyacetone) was a major, previously unobserved emission from burning rice straw (21-34 g/kg). The emission factors for our simulated African fires are consistent with field data for African fires for compounds measured in both the laboratory and the field. However, the higher concentrations and more extensive instrumentation in this work allowed quantification of at least 10 species not previously quantified for African field fires (in order of abundance): acetaldehyde, phenol, acetol, glycolaldehyde, methylvinylether, furan, acetone, acetonitrile, propenenitrile, and propanenitrile. Most of these new compounds are oxygenated organic compounds, which further reinforces the importance of these reactive compounds as initial emissions from global biomass burning. A few high-combustion-efficiency fires emitted very high levels of elemental (black) carbon, suggesting that biomass burning may produce more elemental carbon than previously estimated.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2003

Evolution of gases and particles from a savanna fire in South Africa

Peter V. Hobbs; Parikhit Sinha; Robert J. Yokelson; Ted J. Christian; D. R. Blake; Song Gao; Thomas W. Kirchstetter; T. Novakov; Peter Pilewskie

average OH concentration in the plume was � 1.7 � 10 7 molecules cm � 3 . Excess CN, normalized by excess CO, decreased rapidly during the first � 5 min of aging, probably due to coagulation, and then increased, probably due to gas-to-particle conversion. The CO-normalized concentrations of particles 1.5 mm diameter increased, with smoke age. The spectral depletion of solar radiation by the smoke is depicted. The downwelling UV flux near the vertical center of the plume was about two-thirds of that near the top of the plume. INDEX TERMS: 0315 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Biosphere/atmosphere interactions; 0317 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Chemical kinetic and photochemical properties; 0322 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Constituent sources and sinks; 0345 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Pollution—urban and regional (0305); 3374 Meteorology and Atmospheric Dynamics: Tropical meteorology; KEYWORDS: gases, particles, biomass fires, smoke, savanna fires, evolution of smoke


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2003

Tropospheric carbon monoxide measurements from the Scanning High-Resolution Interferometer Sounder on 7 September 2000 in southern Africa during SAFARI 2000

W. Wallace McMillan; M. L. McCourt; Henry E. Revercomb; Robert O. Knuteson; Ted J. Christian; Bruce G. Doddridge; Peter V. Hobbs; J. V. Lukovich; Paul C. Novelli; Stuart J. Piketh; L. C. Sparling; Deborah C. Stein; R. J. Swap; Robert J. Yokelson

Retrieved tropospheric carbon monoxide (CO) column densities are presented for more than 9000 spectra obtained by the University of Wisconsin-Madison (UWis) Scanning High-Resolution Interferometer Sounder (SHIS) during a flight on the NASA ER-2 on 7 September 2000 as part of the Southern African Regional Science Initiative (SAFARI 2000) dry season field campaign. Enhancements in tropospheric column CO were detected in the vicinity of a controlled biomass burn in the Timbavati Game Reserve in northeastern South Africa and over the edge of the river of smoke in south central Mozambique. Relatively clean air was observed over the far southern coast of Mozambique. Quantitative comparisons are presented with in situ measurements from five different instruments flying on two other aircraft: the University of Washington Convair-580 (CV) and the South African Aerocommander JRB in the vicinity of the Timbavati fire. Measured tropospheric CO columns (extrapolated from 337 to 100 mb) of 2.1 x 10(exp 18) per square centimeter in background air and up to 1.5 x 10(exp 19) per square centimeter in the smoke plume agree well with SHIS retrieved tropospheric CO columns of (2.3 plus or minus 0.25) x 10(exp 18) per square centimeter over background air near the fire and (1.5 plus or minus 0.35) x 10(exp 19) per square centimeter over the smoke plume. Qualitative comparisons are presented with three other in situ CO profiles obtained by the South African JRA aircraft over Mozambique and northern South Africa showing the influence of the river of smoke.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2018

Speciated On-line PM 1 from South Asian Combustion Sources: Part I, Fuel-based Emission Factors and Size Distributions

J. Douglas Goetz; Michael R. Giordano; Chelsea E. Stockwell; Ted J. Christian; Rashmi Maharjan; Sagar Adhikari; Prakash V. Bhave; Puppala S. Praveen; Arnico K. Panday; Thilina Jayarathne; Elizabeth A. Stone; Robert J. Yokelson; P. F. DeCarlo

Combustion of biomass, garbage, and fossil fuels in South Asia has led to poor air quality in the region and has uncertain climate forcing impacts. Online measurements of submicron aerosol (PM1) emissions were conducted as part of the Nepal Ambient Monitoring and Source Testing Experiment (NAMaSTE) to investigate and report emission factors (EFs) and vacuum aerodynamic diameter (dva) size distributions from prevalent but poorly characterized combustion sources. The online aerosol instrumentation included a “mini” aerosol mass spectrometer (mAMS) and a dual-spot eight-channel aethalometer (AE33). The mAMS measured non-refractory PM1 mass, composition, and size. The AE33-measured black carbon (BC) mass and estimated light absorption at 370 nm due to organic aerosol or brown carbon. Complementary gas-phase measurements of carbon dioxide (CO2), carbon monoxide (CO), and methane (CH4) were collected using a Picarro Inc. cavity ring-down spectrometer (CRDS) to calculate fuel-based EFs using the carbon mass balance approach. The investigated emission sources include open garbage burning, diesel-powered irrigation pumps, idling motorcycles, traditional cookstoves fueled with dung and wood, agricultural residue fires, and coal-fired brick-making kilns, all of which were tested in the field. Open-garbage-burning emissions, which included mixed refuse and segregated plastics, were found to have some of the largest PM1 EFs (3.77–19.8 g kg−1) and the highest variability of the investigated emission sources. Nonrefractory organic aerosol (OA) size distributions measured by the mAMS from garbage-burning emissions were observed to have lognormal mode dva values ranging from 145 to 380 nm. Particle-phase hydrogen chloride (HCl) was observed from open garbage burning and was attributed to the burning of chlorinated plastics. Emissions from two diesel-powered irrigation pumps with different operational ages were tested during NAMaSTE. Organic aerosol and BC were the primary components of the emissions and the OA size distributions were centered at ∼ 80 nm dva. The older pump was observed to have significantly larger EFOA than the newer pump (5.18 g kg−1 compared to 0.45 g kg−1) and similar EFBC. Emissions from two distinct types of coal-fired brick-making kilns were investigated. The less advanced, intermittently fired clamp kiln was observed to Published by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union. 14654 J. D. Goetz et al.: PM1 from South Asian combustion sources have relatively large EFs of inorganic aerosol, including sulfate (0.48 g kg−1) and ammonium (0.17 g kg−1), compared to the other investigated emission sources. The clamp kiln was also observed to have the largest absorption Ångström exponent (AAE= 4) and organic carbon (OC) to BC ratio (OC :BC= 52). The continuously fired zigzag kiln was observed to have the largest fraction of sulfate emissions with an EFSO4 of 0.96 g kg −1. Non-refractory aerosol size distributions for the brick kilns were centered at ∼ 400 nm dva. The biomass burning samples were all observed to have significant fractions of OA and non-refractory chloride; based on the size distribution results, the chloride was mostly externally mixed from the OA. The dung-fueled traditional cookstoves were observed to emit ammonium, suggesting that the chloride emissions were partially neutralized. In addition to reporting EFs and size distributions, aerosol optical properties and mass ratios of OC to BC were investigated to make comparisons with other NAMaSTE results (i.e., online photoacoustic extinctiometer (PAX) and off-line filter based) and the existing literature. This work provides critical field measurements of aerosol emissions from important yet undercharacterized combustion sources common to South Asia and the developing world.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2003

Trace gas measurements in nascent, aged, and cloud‐processed smoke from African savanna fires by airborne Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (AFTIR)

Robert J. Yokelson; Isaac T. Bertschi; Ted J. Christian; Peter V. Hobbs; Darold E. Ward; Wei Min Hao


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2008

The tropical forest and fire emissions experiment: laboratory fire measurements and synthesis of campaign data

Robert J. Yokelson; Ted J. Christian; Thomas Karl; Alex Guenther


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2004

Comprehensive laboratory measurements of biomass-burning emissions: 2. First intercomparison of open-path FTIR, PTR-MS, and GC-MS/FID/ECD

Ted J. Christian; B. Kleiss; Robert J. Yokelson; R. Holzinger; Paul J. Crutzen; Wein Min Hao; T. Shirai; D. R. Blake


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2007

The Tropical Forest and Fire Emissions Experiment: overview and airborne fire emission factor measurements

Robert J. Yokelson; Thomas Karl; Paulo Artaxo; D. R. Blake; Ted J. Christian; David W. T. Griffith; Alex Guenther; Wei Min Hao


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2007

The Tropical Forest and Fire Emissions Experiment: method evaluation of volatile organic compound emissions measured by PTR-MS, FTIR, and GC from tropical biomass burning

Thomas Karl; Ted J. Christian; Robert J. Yokelson; Paulo Artaxo; Wei Min Hao; Alex Guenther


Atmospheric Environment | 2003

Emissions of Trace Gases and Particles from Two Ships in the Southern Atlantic Ocean

Parikhit Sinha; Peter V. Hobbs; Robert J. Yokelson; Ted J. Christian; Thomas W. Kirchstetter; Roelof T. Bruintjes

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Wei Min Hao

United States Forest Service

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Peter V. Hobbs

University of Washington

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Darold E. Ward

United States Forest Service

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D. R. Blake

University of California

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Parikhit Sinha

University of Washington

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Thomas W. Kirchstetter

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Alex Guenther

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Peter Pilewskie

University of Colorado Boulder

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