
Distinct Impacts of Light and Heavy Precipitation on PM 2.5 Mass Concentration in Beijing
Author(s) -
Sun Yue,
Zhao Chuanfeng,
Su Yunfei,
Ma Zhanshan,
Li Jiming,
Letu Husi,
Yang Yikun,
Fan Hao
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
earth and space science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.843
H-Index - 23
ISSN - 2333-5084
DOI - 10.1029/2019ea000717
Subject(s) - precipitation , mass concentration (chemistry) , aerosol , environmental science , pollution , beijing , atmospheric sciences , environmental chemistry , chemistry , meteorology , geology , geography , china , ecology , organic chemistry , archaeology , biology
Using hourly observation data of precipitation and P M 2.5 at 12 sites in Beijing from 2015 to 2017, this study investigates the impacts of different types of precipitation on PM 2.5 mass concentration, along with the characteristics of precipitation and PM 2.5 . There were totally 91–123 precipitation events annually, 69.7–79.4% of which has precipitation amount less than 5 mm. By investigating the differences of PM 2.5 mass concentration between 1 hr after and before the precipitation events, this study finds distinct impacts of different types of precipitation on PM 2.5 mass concentration. For precipitation events with amount of 0.1–0.5 mm, PM 2.5 mass concentration increased with precipitation amount with a rate of 0.85 μg/m 3 per 0.1 mm. For precipitation events with amount of 0.5–10 mm, there was no clear relationship between precipitation amount and PM 2.5 mass concentration. For precipitation events with amount larger than 10 mm, PM 2.5 mass concentration decreased with precipitation amount with a rate of 0.17 μg/m 3 per 1 mm. Further analysis shows that weak precipitation less than 10 mm increased PM 10 , and heavy precipitation larger than 10 mm decreased PM 10 . The aerosol amount also affects the response of PM 2.5 to precipitation, with weak pollution prone to increase with precipitation and heavy pollution prone to decrease with precipitation. Likely mechanisms are discussed, which include the aerosol hygroscopic growth and gas‐particle conversion that increase aerosol amount and precipitation scavenging that decreases aerosol amount. Shortly, the mechanisms that increase (decrease) aerosol amount more probably dominate when precipitation is light (heavy).