Back to Search Start Over

Evolution process and sources of ambient volatile organic compounds during a severe haze event in Beijing, China.

Authors :
Wu, Rongrong
Li, Jing
Hao, Yufang
Li, Yaqi
Zeng, Limin
Xie, Shaodong
Source :
Science of the Total Environment. Aug2016, Vol. 560, p62-72. 11p.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

108 ambient volatile organic compounds (VOCs) were measured continuously at a time resolution of an hour using an online gas chromatography–frame ionization detector/mass spectrometry (GC–FID/MS) in October 2014 in Beijing, and positive matrix factorization (PMF) was performed with online data. The evolution process and causes for high levels of VOCs during a haze event were investigated through comprehensive analysis. Results show that mixing ratios of VOCs during the haze event (89.29 ppbv) were 2 to 5 times as that in non-haze days, There was a distinct accumulation process of VOCs at the beginning of the haze event, and the mixing ratios of VOCs maintained at the high levels until to the end of pollution when the mixing ratios of ambient VOCs recovered to the normal concentration levels in a few hours. Some reactive and toxic species increased remarkably as well, which indicates a potential health risk to the public in terms of VOCs. Eight sources were resolved by PMF, and results revealed gasoline exhaust was the largest contributor (32–46%) to the ambient VOCs in Beijing. Emissions of gasoline exhaust surged from 13.46 to 40.36 ppbv, with a similar variation pattern to total VOCs, indicating that high levels of VOCs were largely driven to by expanded vehicular emissions. Emissions of biomass burning also increased noticeably (from 2.32 to 11.12 ppbv), and backward trajectories analysis indicated regional transport of biomass burning emissions. Our findings suggested that extremely high levels of VOCs during the haze event was primarily attributed to vehicular emissions, biomass burning and regional transport, as well as stationary synoptic conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00489697
Volume :
560
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Science of the Total Environment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
114874358
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.04.030