Elsevier, Atmospheric Environment, (87), p. 34-40
DOI: 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2013.11.065
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Particulate organic matter is of interest for air quality and climate research, but the relationship between ambient organic mass (OM) and organic carbon (OC) remains ambiguous both in measurements and in modeling. We present a simple method to derive an estimate of the spatially and seasonally resolved global, lower tropospheric, ratio between OM and OC. We assume ambient NO2 concentrations as a surrogate for fresh emission which mostly determines the continental scale OM/OC ratio. For this, we first develop a parameterization for the OM/OC ratio using the primary organic aerosol (POA) fraction of total OM estimated globally from Aerosol Mass Spectrometer (AMS) measurements, and evaluate it with high mass resolution AMS data. Second, we explore the ability of ground-level NO2 concentrations derived from the OMI satellite sensor to serve as a proxy for fresh emissions that have a high POA fraction, and apply NO2 data to derive ambient POA fraction. The combination of these two methods yields an estimate of OM/OC from NO2 measurements. Although this method has inherent deficiencies over biomass burning, free-tropospheric, and marine environments, elsewhere it offers more information than the currently used global-mean OM/OC ratios. The OMI-derived global OM/OC ratio ranges from 1.3 to 2.1 (μg/μgC), with distinct spatial variation between urban and rural regions. The seasonal OM/OC ratio has a summer maximum and a winter minimum over regions dominated by combustion emissions. This dataset serves as a tool for interpreting organic carbon measurements, and for evaluating modeling of atmospheric organics. We also develop an additional parameterization for models to estimate the ratio of primary OM to OC from simulated NOx concentrations.