Publications of A. Hoffer
All genres
Journal Article (11)
Journal Article
: Hygroscopic properties of Amazonian biomass burning and European background HULIS and investigation of their effects on surface tension with two models linking H-TDMA to CCNC data. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 10 (12), pp. 5625 - 5639 (2010)
Journal Article
41 (1 Sp. Iss. Sp. Iss. SI), pp. 118 - 133 (2010)
Diurnal variation in the water-soluble inorganic ions, organic carbon and isotopic compositions of total carbon and nitrogen in biomass burning aerosols from the LBA-SMOCC campaign in Rondônia, Brazil. Journal of Aerosol Science
Journal Article
10 (5), pp. 2209 - 2225 (2010)
Molecular distributions of dicarboxylic acids, ketocarboxylic acids and α-dicarbonyls in biomass burning aerosols: implications for photochemical production and degradation in smoke layers. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Journal Article
68, pp. 89 - 100 (2010)
Comparison of Amazonian biomass burning and East Asian marine aerosols: Bulk organics, diacids and related compounds, water-soluble inorganic ions, stable carbon and nitrogen isotope ratios. Low Temperature Science
Journal Article
41 (5), pp. 1107 - 1118 (2007)
Constraining the density and complex refractive index of elemental and organic carbon in biomass burning aerosol using optical and chemical measurements. Atmospheric Environment
Journal Article
: Overview of the inorganic and organic composition of size-segregated aerosol in Rondônia, Brazil, from the biomass-burning period to the onset of the wet season. Journal of Geophysical Research-Atmospheres 112 (D1), D01201 (2007)
Journal Article
6, pp. 3563 - 3570 (2006)
Optical properties of humic-like substances (HULIS) in biomass-burning aerosols. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Journal Article
6, pp. 3505 - 3515 (2006)
Diel and seasonal variations in the chemical composition of biomass burning aerosol. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Journal Article
6, pp. 3443 - 3462 (2006)
Spectral light absorption by ambient aerosols influenced by biomass burning in the Amazon Basin. I: Comparison and field calibration of absorption measurement techniques. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Journal Article
: Characterization of the organic composition of aerosols from Rondonia, Brazil, during the LBA-SMOCC 2002 experiment and its representation through model compounds. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 6, pp. 375 - 402 (2006)
Journal Article
: The NH4+ – NO3– – Cl– – SO42– – H2O aerosol system and its gas phase precursors at a pasture site in the Amazon Basin: How relevant are mineral cations and soluble organic acids? Journal of Geophysical Research-Atmospheres 110 (D7), D07303 (2005)