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Characteristics and source apportionment of fine haze aerosol in Beijing during the winter of 2013

Authors
Shang, XiaonaZhang, KaiMeng, FanWang, ShihaoLee, MeehyeSuh, InseonKim, DaigonJeon, KwonhoPark, HyunjuWang, XuezhongZhao, Yuxi
Issue Date
21-Feb-2018
Publisher
COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
Citation
ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, v.18, no.4, pp.2573 - 2584
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS
Volume
18
Number
4
Start Page
2573
End Page
2584
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/77329
DOI
10.5194/acp-18-2573-2018
ISSN
1680-7316
Abstract
For PM2.5 filter samples collected daily at the Chinese Research Academy of Environmental Sciences (Beijing, China) from December of 2013 to February of 2014 (the winter period), chemical characteristics and sources were investigated with an emphasis on haze events in different alert levels. During the 3 months, the average PM2.5 concentration was 89 mu g m(-3), exceeding the Chinese national standard of 75 mu g m(-3) in 24 h. The maximum PM2.5 concentration was 307 mu g m(-3), which characterizes developed-type pollution (PM2.5/PM10 > 0.5) in the World Health Organization criteria. PM2.5 was dominated by SO4-2, NO3-, and pseudo-carbonaceous compounds with obvious differences in concentrations and proportions between non-haze and haze episodes. The non-negative matrix factorization (NMF) analysis provided reasonable PM2.5 source profiles, by which five sources were identified: soil dust, traffic emission, biomass combustion, industrial emission, and coal combustion accounting for 13, 22, 12, 28, and 25% of the total, respectively. The dust impact increased with north-westerlies during non-haze periods and decreased under stagnant conditions during haze periods. A blue alert of heavy air pollution was characterized by the greatest contribution from industrial emissions (61 %). During the Chinese Lantern Festival, an orange alert was issued and biomass combustion was found to be the major source owing to firework explosions. Red-alert haze was almost equally contributed by local traffic and transported coal combustion emissions from the vicinity of Beijing (approximately 40% each) that was distinguished by the highest levels of NO3- and SO4-2, respectively. This study also reveals that the severity and source of haze are largely dependent on meteorological conditions.
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