Formation Mechanisms and Source Apportionments of Nitrate Aerosols in a Megacity of Eastern China Based On Multiple Isotope Observations

Author:

Fan Mei‐Yi1234ORCID,Zhang Wenqi23,Zhang Yan‐Lin23ORCID,Li Jianghanyang56ORCID,Fang Huan56ORCID,Cao Fang23ORCID,Yan Ming7,Hong Yihang3ORCID,Guo Hai4,Michalski Greg56ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Environmental Science and Engineering Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology Nanjing China

2. Atmospheric Environment Center Joint International Research Laboratory of Climate and Environmental Change (ILCEC) Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology Nanjing China

3. School of Applied Meteorology Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology Nanjing China

4. Air Quality Studies Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering The Hong Kong Polytechnic University Hong Kong China

5. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences Purdue University West Lafayette IN USA

6. Department of Chemistry Purdue University West Lafayette IN USA

7. College of Artificial Intelligence Hangzhou Dianzi University Xiasha Higher Education Zone Hangzhou China

Abstract

AbstractInorganic nitrate (NO3) is a crucial component of fine particulate matter (PM2.5) in haze events in China. Understanding the formation mechanisms of nitrate and the sources of NOx was critical to control the air pollution. In this study, measurements of multiple isotope compositions of nitrate (δ18O‐NO3, δ17O‐NO3, and δ15N‐NO3) in PM2.5 were conducted in Hangzhou from 9 October 2015 to 24 August 2016. Our results showed that oxygen anomaly of nitrate (Δ17O‐NO3: 20.0‰–37.9‰) and nitrogen isotope of nitrate (δ15N‐NO3: −2.9‰ to 18.1‰) values were higher in winter and lower in summer. Based on Δ17O‐NO3 observation and a Bayesian model, NO3 radical chemistry was found to dominate the nitrate formation in winter, while photochemical reaction (NO2 + OH) was the main pathway in summer. After considering the nitrogen isotopic fractionation in the NOx(g)‐NO3(p) conversion, the average contributions of coal combustion, vehicle exhausts, biomass burning, and soil emission were 50% ± 9%, 19% ± 12%, 26% ± 15%, and 5% ± 4%, respectively, to nitrate aerosols during the whole sampling period. Coal combustion was the most important nitrate source in Hangzhou, especially in winter (∼56%). The contribution of soil emission increased significantly in summer due to active soil microbial processes under high temperature environment.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Atmospheric Science,Geophysics

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