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Wetlands with greater degree of urbanization improve PM2.5 removal efficiency

Authors :
Yanan Wu
Mingxiang Zhang
Yu Wang
Zhenming Zhang
Guoxin Yan
Jiakai Liu
Source :
Chemosphere. 207:601-611
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2018.

Abstract

In recent decades, China has experienced both rapid urbanization and heavy air pollution and the rapid urbanization trend would be continue in the next decade. Wetlands have been shown to be efficient in particle removal, primarily through dry deposition and leaf accumulation. Thus, a more comprehensive understanding of PM2.5 removal by wetlands during urbanization processes could inform urban planning. In the current study, three wetland plots, Cuihu Lake Park (CL), Summer Palace (SP), and Olympic Park (OP), were selected as low, medium, and highly degrees of urbanization site respectively based on the proportions of building and traffic district areas to compare the removal efficiencies. Results show the average dry deposition velocity in OP was significantly higher than CL and SP. Dry deposition is mainly influenced by meteorological conditions. Buildings and other infrastructure make the meteorological conditions conducive to deposition, resulting in higher wind velocity, higher temperature, and more intense turbulence between buildings. Variation in leaf accumulation was not statistically significant between the three plots, and plant species was the major factor affecting the amount of accumulation. The dry deposition contribution to particle removal increases with degree of urbanization. The average dry deposition accounted for 39.74%, 52.55%, and 62.75% at low, middle and high level respectively. Therefore, Wetlands with greater degree of urbanization improve PM2.5 removal efficiency primarily by accelerating the dry deposition process. The result emphasizes the importance of wetlands in particle removal in highly urbanized areas and thus more wetlands should be preserved and/or created during urban expansion.

Details

ISSN :
00456535
Volume :
207
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chemosphere
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fc59ae1b2f3ba8a29bfdea0cb5eb85d9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2018.05.131