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Direct measurements of black carbon fluxes in central Beijing using the eddy covariance method

Authors :
Joshi, Rutambhara
Liu, Dantong
Nemitz, Eiko
Langford, Ben
Mullinger, Neil
Squires, Freya
Lee, James
Wu, Yunfei
Pan, Xiaole
Fu, Pingqing
Kotthaus, Simone
Grimmond, Sue
Zhang, Qiang
Wu, Ruili
Wild, Oliver
Flynn, Michael
Coe, Hugh
Allan, James
Joshi, Rutambhara
Liu, Dantong
Nemitz, Eiko
Langford, Ben
Mullinger, Neil
Squires, Freya
Lee, James
Wu, Yunfei
Pan, Xiaole
Fu, Pingqing
Kotthaus, Simone
Grimmond, Sue
Zhang, Qiang
Wu, Ruili
Wild, Oliver
Flynn, Michael
Coe, Hugh
Allan, James
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Black carbon (BC) forms an important component of particulate matter globally, due to its impact on climate, the environment and human health. Identifying and quantifying its emission sources are critical for effective policymaking and achieving the desired reduction in air pollution. In this study, we present the first direct measurements of urban BC fluxes using eddy covariance. The measurements were made over Beijing within the UK-China Air Pollution and Human Health (APHH) winter 2016 and summer 2017 campaigns. In both seasons, the mean measured BC mass (winter: 5.49 ng m−2 s−1, summer: 6.10 ng m−2 s−1) and number fluxes (winter: 261.25 particles cm−2 s−1, summer: 334.37 particles cm−2 s−1) were similar. Traffic was determined to be the dominant source of the BC fluxes measured during both seasons. The total BC emissions within the 2013 Multi-resolution Emission Inventory for China (MEIC) are on average too high compared to measured fluxes by a factor of 58.8 (winter) and 47.2 (summer). Only a comparison with the MEIC transport sector shows that emissions are also larger (factor of 37.5 in winter and 37.7 in summer) than the measured flux. Emission ratios of BC ∕ NOx and BC ∕ CO are comparable to vehicular emission control standards implemented in January 2017 for gasoline (China 5) and diesel (China V) engines, indicating a reduction of BC emissions within central Beijing, and extending this to a larger area would further reduce total BC concentrations.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
text, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1196335423
Document Type :
Electronic Resource