2004
DOI: 10.1029/2003jd004330
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Anthropogenic black carbon and fine aerosol distribution over Europe

Abstract: [1] We present a model simulation for the year 1995 accounting for primary particles, which are an important component of fine aerosols over Europe. A new emission inventory for black carbon (BC) was developed on the basis of the recent European emission inventory of anthropogenic primary particulate matter (Coordinated European Programme on Particulate Matter Emission Inventories, Projections and Guidance (CEPMEIP)). The annual BC emissions of Europe and the former Soviet Union for 1995 are estimated at 0.47 … Show more

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Cited by 115 publications
(103 citation statements)
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References 74 publications
(119 reference statements)
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“…For Europe (including European part of Russia), the published studies of BC and OC Kupiainen and Klimont, 2007;Schaap et al, 2004;see Table S8.1) compare well showing differences within ±10 % or less with the exception of EDGAR (Janssens-Maenhout et al, 2015), which shows much lower emissions but does not include any Russian territory. At the level of whole of Europe, GAINS calculates similar PM 10 and PM 2.5 emissions as officially reported to UNECE LRTAP Convention (www.ceip.at), while the EDGAR estimate is nearly 40 % lower for both species but does not include Russia (Table S8.1).…”
Section: Comparison With Other Studiesmentioning
confidence: 61%
“…For Europe (including European part of Russia), the published studies of BC and OC Kupiainen and Klimont, 2007;Schaap et al, 2004;see Table S8.1) compare well showing differences within ±10 % or less with the exception of EDGAR (Janssens-Maenhout et al, 2015), which shows much lower emissions but does not include any Russian territory. At the level of whole of Europe, GAINS calculates similar PM 10 and PM 2.5 emissions as officially reported to UNECE LRTAP Convention (www.ceip.at), while the EDGAR estimate is nearly 40 % lower for both species but does not include Russia (Table S8.1).…”
Section: Comparison With Other Studiesmentioning
confidence: 61%
“…More than 50 inter-method and inter-laboratory comparisons for the determination of EC a or BC e have been conducted, showing typical differences of a factor of 2 between methods, but sometimes even discrepancies of a factor of 7 . In spite of this ongoing controversy and with few exceptions (e.g., Streets et al, 2001;Bond et al, 2004), "BC" is very often considered a single, well-defined and well-determined entity throughout the troposphere, especially in emission inventories, radiative transfer, and climate models, which has a uniform composition and physical properties approaching those of pure carbon black (e.g., Hansen et al, 2000;Chung and Seinfeld, 2002;Schaap et al, 2004;Wang, 2004;Hansen et al, 2005).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Preliminary comparisons of simulations with the EMEP model in 2002 and 2003 with measurements for 14 mainly rural sites during July 2002 to April 2003 (one sample per week) show a model underestimation between a factor of 1.5 to 3 for rural sites (Tørseth et al, 2004;Yttri et al, 2005). Schaap et al (2004b) also find an EC underestimation with the LOTUS model by a factor of two and more for rural sites, using climatological observations (generally not taken at the same time as simulations). These underestimations are qualitatively in line with results from our study also showing a model underestimation for rural sites.…”
Section: Elemental Carbonmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…PM 10 emissions were split into a PM 2.5 and a coarse PM (PM 10 -PM 2.5 ) part, the PM 2.5 part was further split into mineral dust, EC and primary OC. EC fractions in PM 2.5 emissions for different SNAP sectors given in Table 1 were taken from Builtjes et al (2003) and are discussed in detail in Schaap et al (2004b). For primary OC, no such factors exist to our knowledge for Europe.…”
Section: Emissionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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