Frontiers in Environmental Science (May 2023)

Chemical composition, sources and evolution of wintertime inorganic and organic aerosols in urban Shanghai, China

  • Yijie Qian,
  • Dongmei Cai,
  • Miaomiao Zhang,
  • Xiaojuan Huang,
  • Juntao Huo,
  • Yusen Duan,
  • Tiantao Cheng,
  • Tiantao Cheng,
  • Tiantao Cheng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvs.2023.1199652
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

Read online

China experienced severe haze pollution in the past decades. However, systematic characterization of atmospheric fine particles with advanced measurement techniques has been very scarce in Shanghai, which is the largest megacity in China. Herein, we present the characterization of non-refractory submicron aerosol (NR-PM1) in urban Shanghai during winter 2017 by applying an Aerosol Chemical Speciation Monitor (ACSM, Aerodyne Research Inc.). The NR-PM1 is predominated by organics (43%), followed by nitrate (29%), sulfate (18%), ammonium (7%), and chloride (3%). Regarding the organic aerosol (OA) factors, three organic aerosol factors were identified and classified as hydrocarbon-like organic aerosol (HOA), less-oxygenated organic aerosol (LO-OOA), and more-oxygenated organic aerosol (MO-OOA), which contributed 32%, 22%, and 46% to total organic aerosol respectively. The NR-PM1 composition exhibited an increase in secondary inorganic aerosol (SIA) (sulfate, nitrate and ammonium) contribution from clean episodes (49%) to pollution episodes (59%), while organic aerosol contribution decreased accordingly from 48% to 39%. The strong increase of sulfate in high-relative humidity (RH) pollution episodes indicated that aqueous-phase oxidation of SO2 could be an important formation process for sulfate during particulate air pollution period. The contribution of nitrate was elevated from 25% during clean episodes to 32% during polluted episodes, likely owing to the increase of relative humidity which facilitates the hydrolysis of N2O5 and the gas-to-particle partitioning of hydrophilic NH4NO3 and. Further analysis of atmospheric formation relevance suggested that less-oxygenated organic aerosol formation was mainly driven by aqueous-phase chemistry reactions, whereas photochemical oxidation became an important process for more-oxygenated organic aerosol formation. Meanwhile, less-oxygenated organic aerosol formation may also be influenced by atmospheric oxidative tracer (i.e., Ox), as less-oxygenated organic aerosol exhibited a distinct peak at noon under high-relative humidity condition.

Keywords