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Lin Huang

Researcher at Environment Canada

Publications -  61
Citations -  3079

Lin Huang is an academic researcher from Environment Canada. The author has contributed to research in topics: Arctic & Isotopes of carbon. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 58 publications receiving 2514 citations. Previous affiliations of Lin Huang include Ontario Ministry of the Environment.

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Carbonaceous species in PM 2.5 at a pair of rural/urban sites in Beijing, 2005–2008

TL;DR: In this paper, weekly organic and elemental carbon (OC and EC) concentrations from these samples were measured to investigate their atmospheric concentrations, temporal variation patterns and the factors influencing these aspects.
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The Stable Carbon Isotope Ratio of Biogenic Emissions of Isoprene and the Potential Use of Stable Isotope Ratio Measurements to Study Photochemical Processing of Isoprene in the Atmosphere

TL;DR: In this article, the stable carbon isotope ratio (δ 13C) of isoprene emitted from Velvet Bean (Mucana pruriens L. var. utilis), including the light and temperature dependence, was determined.
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Observations of OM/OC and specific attenuation coefficients (SAC) in ambient fine PM at a rural site in central Ontario, Canada

TL;DR: In this article, the concentrations of organic carbon, pyrolysis organic carbon (POC), and elemental carbon (EC) were determined by thermal analysis using an Aerodyne C-ToF Aerosol Mass Spectrometer (AMS) and particle absorption coefficient (basp) obtained from a Radiance Research Particle Soot Absorption Photometer (PSAP).
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Source attribution of Arctic black carbon constrained by aircraft and surface measurements

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors interpret a series of recent airborne (NETCARE 2015; PAMARCMiP 2009 and 2011 campaigns) and ground-based measurements (at Alert, Barrow and Ny-Alesund) from multiple methods (thermal, laser incandescence and light absorption) with the GEOS-Chem global chemical transport model and its adjoint to attribute the sources of Arctic BC.
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An evaluation of three methods for measuring black carbon in Alert, Canada

TL;DR: For example, Petzold et al. as discussed by the authors used a single particle soot photometer (SP2) to estimate the mass of the refractory black carbon (rBC) component of individual particles.