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Persistent sulfate formation from London Fog to Chinese haze

Authors :
Bowen Pan
Limin Zeng
Yujiao Zhu
Mario J. Molina
Guohui Li
Weijian Zhou
Renyi Zhang
Yao Huang
Dongjie Shang
Jian Gao
Jeremiah Secrest
Tafeng Hu
Peter S. Liss
Charles E. Kolb
Yuemeng Ji
Yuting Cheng
Daniel Rosenfeld
Yixin Li
Gehui Wang
Min Shao
Yun Lin
Mario E. Gomez
Min Hu
Pengfei Tian
Jianjun Li
Weigang Wang
Yuan Wang
Jiaxi Hu
Song Guo
Zhuofei Du
Jianfei Peng
Misti L. Zamora
Chunlei Cheng
Junji Cao
Fang Zhang
Jingjing Meng
Jing Zheng
Lingxiao Yang
Yanqin Ren
Robert A. Duce
Zhisheng An
Wilmarie Marrero-Ortiz
Li Cai
Jiayuan Wang
Yuesi Wang
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 113:13630-13635
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2016.

Abstract

Sulfate aerosols exert profound impacts on human and ecosystem health, weather, and climate, but their formation mechanism remains uncertain. Atmospheric models consistently underpredict sulfate levels under diverse environmental conditions. From atmospheric measurements in two Chinese megacities and complementary laboratory experiments, we show that the aqueous oxidation of SO_2 by NO_2 is key to efficient sulfate formation but is only feasible under two atmospheric conditions: on fine aerosols with high relative humidity and NH_3 neutralization or under cloud conditions. Under polluted environments, this SO_2 oxidation process leads to large sulfate production rates and promotes formation of nitrate and organic matter on aqueous particles, exacerbating severe haze development. Effective haze mitigation is achievable by intervening in the sulfate formation process with enforced NH_3 and NO_2 control measures. In addition to explaining the polluted episodes currently occurring in China and during the 1952 London Fog, this sulfate production mechanism is widespread, and our results suggest a way to tackle this growing problem in China and much of the developing world.

Details

ISSN :
10916490 and 00278424
Volume :
113
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f29245d94dddcdcf4ddeb8b9ce1c3c57
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1616540113