Influence of Solar Irradiation on Nitrous Acid Production in Western
U.S. Wildfire Smoke
Abstract
Biomass burning is a primary emission source for a host of gas- and
aerosol-phase compounds, which can damage environmental and human
health. During the FIREX-AQ campaign in July and August of 2019, we
measured reactive nitrogen species (NOx, NO2, HONO, HNO3 and p-NO3-), in
wildfire plumes aboard NASA Langley’s Mobile Aerosol Characterization
Laboratory (MACH-2). Nitrous acid (HONO) and nitric acid (HNO3) mixing
ratios were measured at nominal 5-minute resolution using a dual mist
chamber-ion chromatograph from five separate areas of fire in the
western US and are the primary focus of this paper. Average HONO mixing
ratios were significantly higher in young daytime smoke compared to
young nighttime smoke, while no statistical differences were observed
between young versus aged smoke during the day or night. In the largest
fire sampled during the day, UV-A irradiation was highly correlated (R2
= 0.91) with HONO to nitrogen dioxide (NO2) ratios indicating that
photo-enhanced heterogeneous NO2 to HONO conversion, likely facilitated
by ground surfaces (e.g. soil, foliage, and dust), more than compensated
for rapid photolytic loss of HONO.