Measurement report: Comparison of wintertime individual particles at ground level and above the mixed layer in urban Beijing
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Published:2021-04-07
Issue:7
Volume:21
Page:5301-5314
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Wang Wenhua, Shao LongyiORCID, Mazzoleni ClaudioORCID, Li Yaowei, Kotthaus SimoneORCID, Grimmond SueORCID, Bhandari JanarjanORCID, Xing Jiaoping, Feng Xiaolei, Zhang Mengyuan, Shi ZongboORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Beijing has been suffering from frequent severe air pollution events, with
concentrations affected significantly by the mixed-layer height. Major
efforts have been made to study the physico-chemical properties,
compositions, and sources of aerosol particles at ground level. However,
little is known about the morphology, elemental composition, and mixing
state of aerosol particles above the mixed layer. In this work, we collected
individual aerosol particles simultaneously at ground level (2 m above
ground) and above the mixed layer in urban Beijing (within the Atmospheric
Pollution and Human Health in a Chinese Megacity, APHH-Beijing, 2016 winter
campaign). The particles were analyzed offline by transmission electron
microscopy coupled with energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy. Our results
showed that the relative number contribution of mineral particles to all
measured particles was much higher during non-haze periods (42.5 %) than
haze periods (18.1 %); in contrast, internally mixed particles
contributed more during haze periods (21.9 %) than non-haze periods
(7.2 %) at ground level. In addition, more mineral particles were found at
ground level than above the mixed-layer height. Around 20 % of individual
particles showed core–shell structures during haze periods, whereas only a
few core–shell particles were observed during non-haze periods (2 %). The
results showed that the particles above the mixed layer were more aged, with
a larger proportion of organic particles originating from coal combustion.
Our results indicate that a large fraction of the airborne particles above
the mixed layer come from surrounding areas influenced by coal combustion
activities. This source contributes to the surface particle concentrations
in Beijing when polluted air is mixed down to the ground level.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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