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The formation and mitigation of nitrate pollution: comparison between urban and suburban environments

Authors :
Xiao-Bing Li
Haichao Wang
Caihong Wu
E Zheng
Suxia Yang
Chen Wang
Wei Chen
Shan Huang
Sihang Wang
Bin Yuan
Duohong Chen
Chenglei Pei
Xinming Wang
Zelong Wang
Chunlei Cheng
Wei Song
Xiaoyun Yang
Xianjun He
Wenjie Wang
Mingfu Cai
Weiwei Hu
David D. Parrish
Min Shao
Xuemei Wang
Chaomin Wang
Baolin Wang
Jun Zhou
Yuwen Peng
Junyu Zheng
Tiange Li
Yu Song
Zhanyi Zhang
Peng Cheng
Chenshuo Ye
Jipeng Qi
Source :
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics. 22:4539-4556
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Copernicus GmbH, 2022.

Abstract

Ambient nitrate has been of increasing concern in PM2.5, while there are still large uncertainties in quantifying the formation of nitrate aerosol. The formation pathways of nitrate aerosol at an urban site and a suburban site in the Pearl River Delta (PRD) are investigated using an observation-constrained box model. Throughout the campaigns, aerosol pollution episodes were constantly accompanied with the increase in nitrate concentrations and fractions at both urban and suburban sites. The simulations demonstrate that chemical reactions in the daytime and at night both contributed significantly to formation of nitrate in the boundary layer at the two sites. However, nighttime reactions predominantly occurred aloft in the residual layer at the urban site, and downward transport from the residual layer in the morning is an important source (53 %) for surface nitrate at the urban site, whereas similar amounts of nitrate were produced in the nocturnal boundary layer and residual layer at the suburban site, which results in little downward transport of nitrate from the residual layer to the ground at the suburban site. We show that nitrate formation was in the volatile-organic-compound-limited (VOC-limited) regime at the urban site, and in the transition regime at the suburban site, identical to the response of ozone at both sites. The reduction of VOC emissions can be an efficient approach to mitigate nitrate in both urban and suburban areas through influencing hydroxyl radical (OH) and N2O5 production, which will also be beneficial for the synergistic control of regional ozone pollution. The results highlight that the relative importance of nitrate formation pathways and ozone can be site-specific, and the quantitative understanding of various pathways of nitrate formation will provide insights for developing nitrate and ozone mitigation strategies.

Details

ISSN :
16807324
Volume :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1ae1645b03caf6d843b71d1492eae406
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-22-4539-2022