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Regional and local new particle formation events observed in the Yangtze River Delta region, China
Author(s) -
Dai Liang,
Wang Honglei,
Zhou Luyu,
An Junlin,
Tang Lili,
Lu Chunsong,
Yan Wenlian,
Liu Ruiyang,
Kong Shaofei,
Chen Mindong,
Lee Shanhu,
Yu Huan
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8996
pISSN - 2169-897X
DOI - 10.1002/2016jd026030
Subject(s) - nucleation , aerosol , cloud condensation nuclei , environmental science , delta , atmospheric sciences , yangtze river , china , particle number , physical geography , geography , meteorology , chemistry , physics , organic chemistry , archaeology , astronomy , plasma , quantum mechanics
To study the spatial inhomogeneity of new particle formation (NPF) in the polluted atmosphere of China, we conducted simultaneous measurements at an urban site near a petrochemical industrial area and a regional background site in the Yangtze River Delta region from September to November 2015. At the urban site we observed a type of local NPF event (number of events: n = 5), in which nucleation was limited to a small area but persisted for 6.8 h on average during the daytime. Formation rates of 5 nm particles ( J 5 ) were found to be correlated positively with the H 2 SO 4 proxy (log J 5 versus log[H 2 SO 4 ] slope near 1) in both local and regional events. Furthermore, J 5 was enhanced by the anthropogenic volatile organic carbon (VOC) plumes from nearby industrial area in the local events compared to the regional events. Size‐dependent aerosol dynamics calculation showed that in comparison with the observed regional events, the local events were featured with high nucleation rate ( J 1.3 > 1000 cm −3 s −1 ), high growth rate of sub‐3 nm particles (GR sub‐3 > 20 nm h −1 ), and high number concentration of nucleation mode particles (mean peak N 5‐20 : 6 × 10 4 cm −3 ). Considering these features, the local NPF events of anthropogenic origin may also be an important contributor to cloud condensation nuclei concentrations in urban and regional scales. In addition, the comparison of simultaneous regional NPF events between the two sites (number of events: n = 7) suggested that regional NPF intensity may be underestimated by the single‐point measurement at an urban site, due to the heterogeneity of air masses.