Elucidating ozone and PM2.5 pollution in the Fenwei Plain reveals the co-benefits of controlling precursor gas emissions in winter haze
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Published:2023-03-23
Issue:6
Volume:23
Page:3595-3607
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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:
Lin Chunshui, Huang Ru-Jin, Zhong Haobin, Duan Jing, Wang Zixi, Huang Wei, Xu WeiORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The Fenwei Plain, home to 50 million people in
central China, is one of the most polluted regions in China. In 2018, the Fenwei
Plain was designated as one of the three key regions for the “Blue Sky
Protection Campaign”, along with the Beijing–Tianjin–Hebei (BTH) and
Yangtze River Delta (YRD) regions. However, compared to BTH and YRD, our
understanding of the current status of air pollution in the Fenwei Plain is
limited partly due to a lack of detailed analysis of the transformation from
precursor gases to secondary products including secondary organic aerosol
(SOA) and ozone. Through the analysis of 7 years (2015–2021) of surface
monitoring of the air pollutants in Xi'an, the largest city in the Fenwei
Plain, we show that roughly two-thirds of the days exceeded either the PM2.5 or the O3 level-1 air quality standard, highlighting the severity of
air pollution. Moreover, an increase in O3 pollution in the winter
haze was also revealed, due to the constantly elevated reactive oxygenated
volatile organic compounds (OVOCs), in particular formaldehyde, with
an ozone formation potential of over 50 µg m−3, in combination with
the reduced NO2. The abrupt decrease of NO2, as observed during
the lockdown in 2020, provided real-world evidence of the control measures,
targeting only NOx (70 % decrease on average), and were insufficient to
reduce ozone pollution because reactive OVOCs remained constantly high in a
volatile organic compound (VOC)-limited regime. Model simulation results showed that with NO2
reduction from 20 %–70 %, the self-reaction rate between peroxy radicals, a
pathway for SOA formation, was intensified by up to 75 %, while the
self-reaction rate was only reduced with a further reduction of VOCs of
> 50 %. Therefore, a synergic reduction in PM2.5 and
O3 pollution can only be achieved through a more aggressive reduction
of their precursor gases. This study elucidates the status of ozone and
PM2.5 pollution in one of the most polluted regions in China, revealing
a general trend of increasing secondary pollution, i.e., ozone and SOA in
winter haze. Controlling precursor gas emissions is anticipated to curb both
ozone and SOA formation, which will benefit not just the Fenwei Plain but
also other regions in China.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China Chinese Academy of Sciences Institute of Earth Environment, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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