Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (Apr 2024)

A large role of missing volatile organic compound reactivity from anthropogenic emissions in ozone pollution regulation

  • W. Wang,
  • W. Wang,
  • B. Yuan,
  • H. Su,
  • Y. Cheng,
  • J. Qi,
  • S. Wang,
  • W. Song,
  • X. Wang,
  • C. Xue,
  • C. Ma,
  • F. Bao,
  • H. Wang,
  • S. Lou,
  • M. Shao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-24-4017-2024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24
pp. 4017 – 4027

Abstract

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There are thousands of volatile organic compound (VOC) species in ambient air, while existing techniques can only detect a small part of them (approximately several hundred). The large number of unmeasured VOCs prevents us from understanding the photochemistry of ozone and aerosols in the atmosphere. The major sources and photochemical effects of these unmeasured VOCs in urban areas remain unclear. The missing VOC reactivity, which is defined as the total OH reactivity of the unmeasured VOCs, is a good indicator for constraining the photochemical effect of unmeasured VOCs. Here, we identified the dominant role of anthropogenic emission sources in the missing VOC reactivity (accounting for up to 70 %) by measuring missing VOC reactivity and tracer-based source analysis in a typical megacity in China. Omitting the missing VOC reactivity from anthropogenic emissions in model simulations will remarkably affect the diagnosis of sensitivity regimes for ozone formation, overestimating the degree of VOC-limited regimes by up to 46 %. Therefore, a thorough quantification of missing VOC reactivity from various anthropogenic emission sources is urgently needed for constraints of air quality models and the development of effective ozone control strategies.