Dr. Kirchstetter is a Staff Scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, where he is a Deputy Leader in the Sustainable Energy Systems Group and a member of the Heat Island Group. He studies the role of particulate matter in the environment as it relates to energy use, climate, and air quality. He has more than 50 refereed archival journal papers and holds a concurrent appointment at the University of California, Berkeley as an Associate Adjunct Professor in the Civil and Environmental Engineering Department. Tom's current research interests include:
- Snow albedo reduction due to black carbon contamination
- Motor vehicle pollutant emissions and impacts of control regulations
- Pollutant emissions reductions associated with next-generation cookstoves for the developing world
- Climate-relevant chemical and optical properties of particles in the atmosphere
- Emerging "cool" technologies for energy savings and heat island mitigation
This publications database is an ongoing project, and not all Division publications are represented here yet.
Publications
2009
McMeeking, Gavin R., Sonia M. Kreidenweis, Stephen Baker, Christian M. Carrico, Judith C. Chow, Jeffrey Collett L. Jr., Wei Min Hao, Amanda S. Holden, Thomas W. Kirchstetter, William C. Malm et al. "
Emissions of trace gases and aerosols during the open combustion of biomass in the laboratory."
Journal of Geophysical Research 114 (2009).
Timko, Michael T., Zhenhong Yu, Jesse Kroll, John T. Jayne, Douglas R. Worsnop, Richard C. Miake-Lye, Timothy B. Onasch, David Liscinsky, Thomas W. Kirchstetter, Hugo Destaillats et al. "
Sampling artifacts from conductive silicone tubing."
Aerosol Science and Technology 43, no. 9 (2009): 855-865.
2008
2007