Co‐Occurring Extremes of Fine Particulate Matter (PM2.5) and Ground‐Level Ozone in the Summer of Southern China

Author:

Lyu Yan123ORCID,Wu Haonan1,Liu Xiaoran4,Han Fuliang5,Lv Fengmao5,Pang Xiaobing1ORCID,Chen Jianmin6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Environment Zhejiang University of Technology Hangzhou China

2. Shaoxing Research Institute Zhejiang University of Technology Shaoxing China

3. School of Environment and Spatial Informatics China University of Mining and Technology Xuzhou China

4. Deqing County Meteorological Bureau of Zhejiang Province Deqing China

5. School of Computing and Artificial Intelligence Southwest Jiaotong University Chengdu China

6. Department of Environmental Science and Engineering Fudan University Shanghai China

Abstract

AbstractConcurrent pollution of fine particulate matter (PM2.5) and ozone has been increasingly reported in China recently. Here, we further confirm widespread co‐occurring summertime PM2.5‐ozone extremes in southern China. Annual‐average frequency of co‐occurrence is above 50% from 2015 to 2022, especially in Pearl River Delta region (72 ± 12%). The spatial extent (city numbers) and temporal persistence (co‐occurrence days) for cities with co‐occurrence frequency >50% increase at a rate of two cities/year and 14 days/year, respectively. We further identify typical synoptic conditions (e.g., typhoon periphery circulation, West Pacific subtropical high) conducive to widespread co‐occurrence. Through combining multi‐source data, Random Forest model well predicts PM2.5‐ozone co‐occurrence and identifies common precursors (e.g., volatile organic compounds) as important variables. Finally, we postulate co‐occurrence is linked to synoptic conditions and secondary generation of PM2.5‐ozone from shared precursors. Our results suggest high potentials for co‐occurring PM2.5‐ozone extremes in southern China and control strategies on common precursors to mitigate concurrent pollution.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Geophysics

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