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Pollution Characteristics of PM2.5 Aerosol during Haze Periods in Changchun, China
Author(s) -
Chunsheng Fang,
Zhida Zhang,
Meiying Jin,
Pengchao Zou,
Wang Ju
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
aerosol and air quality research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.866
H-Index - 55
eISSN - 2071-1409
pISSN - 1680-8584
DOI - 10.4209/aaqr.2016.09.0407
Subject(s) - haze , environmental science , pollution , pollutant , inorganic ions , aerosol , correlation coefficient , atmospheric sciences , atmosphere (unit) , daytime , air pollution , particulates , environmental chemistry , wind speed , meteorology , chemistry , ion , geography , geology , statistics , ecology , mathematics , organic chemistry , biology
To study the pollution characteristics of PM_(2.5) during the haze period in October 2014, the hourly automatic monitoring data and 22-h atmospheric PM_(2.5) samples were collected in Changchun city. According to the statistical results of the hourly average PM_(2.5) concentration, heavy pollution occurred from October 13 to November 1 in 2014 in Changchun city. The daily concentration of PM_(2.5) during this period was 53.18 μg m^(-3) to 450.69 μg m^(-3). In addition, the PM_(2.5) concentration was higher at night and lower during the daytime on haze days, which is affected by pollutant emission and meteorological conditions. The Pearson correlation coefficient between PM_(2.5) and CO was high (r = 0.745), which implies that the concentration suddenly increased, probably because of the combustion of fossil fuels and other organic matter. The meteorological condition investigation shows that the wind speed, temperature and pressure are low and that the RH value is relatively high on haze days. In addition, stable weather during haze days makes the pollution heavier. The analysis of water-soluble inorganic ions (WSIIs) suggests that WSIIs constituted up to 21-56% of PM_(2.5), and the total ions, anions and cations showed a significant correlation. During the haze days, the NO_3^-/SO_4^(2-) ratio was substantial (3.7-4.6), except at the CP and JZP stations, which suggests that the pollutants in the atmosphere are from a mixture of stationary emission and mobile emission. The NOR and SOR values were more than 0.1 at most sampling stations, so serious secondary pollution occurs in the atmosphere on haze days, and secondary ion formation is enhanced by the atmospheric conditions and emissions of gaseous SO_2 and NO_2.

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