Back to Search Start Over

Uptake of Water‐soluble Gas‐phase Oxidation Products Drives Organic Particulate Pollution in Beijing

Authors :
Gkatzelis, Georgios I.
Papanastasiou, Dimitrios K.
Karydis, Vlassis A.
Hohaus, Thorsten
Liu, Ying
Schmitt, Sebastian H.
Schlag, Patrick
Fuchs, Hendrik
Novelli, Anna
Chen, Qi
Cheng, Xi
Broch, Sebastian
Dong, Huabin
Holland, Frank
Li, Xin
Liu, Yuhan
Ma, Xuefei
Reimer, David
Rohrer, Franz
Shao, Min
Tan, Zhaofeng
Taraborrelli, Domenico
Tillmann, Ralf
Wang, Haichao
Wang, Yu
Wu, Yusheng
Wu, Zhijun
Zeng, Limin
Zheng, Jun
Hu, Min
Lu, Keding
Hofzumahaus, Andreas
Zhang, Yuanhang
Wahner, Andreas
Kiendler‐Scharr, Astrid
Source :
Geophysical Research Letters; April 2021, Vol. 48 Issue: 8
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Despite the recent decrease in pollution events in Chinese urban areas, the World Health Organization air quality guideline values are still exceeded. Observations from monitoring networks show a stronger decrease of organic aerosol directly emitted to the atmosphere relative to secondary organic aerosol (SOA) generated from oxidation processes. Here, the uptake of water‐soluble gas‐phase oxidation products is reported as a major SOA contribution to particulate pollution in Beijing, triggered by the increase of aerosol liquid water. In pollution episodes, this pathway is enough to explain the increase in SOA mass, with formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, glycolaldehyde, formic acid, and acetic acid alone explaining 15%–25% of the SOA increase. Future mitigation strategies to reduce non‐methane volatile organic compound emissions should be considered to reduce organic particulate pollution in China. In the rapidly developing Chinese economy, air pollution from particulate matter (PM) is a major human health risk factor. We show that secondary organic aerosol (SOA) generated from oxidation processes represent 50%–80% of the organic PM in Beijing. We find that non‐equilibrium dissolution of C1−C2 carbonyl compounds to particles is a major pathway of SOA formation during pollution events. These compounds are ubiquitous products in the chemical oxidation of hydrocarbons; thus, the reduction of a single volatile organic compound precursor would not reduce the organic PM, but rather a broad reduction of the organic reactivity is required. Secondary organic aerosol generated from oxidation processes dominates organic particulate pollution in BeijingNon‐equilibrium dissolution of carbonyl compounds to particles is a major pathway of SOA formation during haze episodesA broad reduction of the gas‐phase organic reactivity is required to reduce secondary organic aerosol formation in haze events Secondary organic aerosol generated from oxidation processes dominates organic particulate pollution in Beijing Non‐equilibrium dissolution of carbonyl compounds to particles is a major pathway of SOA formation during haze episodes A broad reduction of the gas‐phase organic reactivity is required to reduce secondary organic aerosol formation in haze events

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00948276
Volume :
48
Issue :
8
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Geophysical Research Letters
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs56012752
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2020GL091351