Big Earth Data (Jul 2020)

Continuous and comprehensive atmospheric observations in Beijing: a station to understand the complex urban atmospheric environment

  • Yongchun Liu,
  • Chao Yan,
  • Zemin Feng,
  • Feixue Zheng,
  • Xiaolong Fan,
  • Yusheng Zhang,
  • Chang Li,
  • Ying Zhou,
  • Zhuohui Lin,
  • Yishou Guo,
  • Ying Zhang,
  • Li Ma,
  • Wenshuo Zhou,
  • Zhikun Liu,
  • Lubna Dada,
  • Kaspar Dällenbach,
  • Jenni Kontkanen,
  • Runlong Cai,
  • Tommy Chan,
  • Biwu Chu,
  • Wei Du,
  • Lei Yao,
  • Yonghong Wang,
  • Jing Cai,
  • Juha Kangasluoma,
  • Tom Kokkonen,
  • Joni Kujansuu,
  • Anton Rusanen,
  • Chenjuan Deng,
  • Yueyun Fu,
  • Rujing Yin,
  • Xiaoxiao Li,
  • Yiqun Lu,
  • Yiliang Liu,
  • Chaofan Lian,
  • Dongsen Yang,
  • Weigang Wang,
  • Maofa Ge,
  • Yuesi Wang,
  • Douglas R. Worsnop,
  • Heikki Junninen,
  • Hong He,
  • Veli-Matti Kerminen,
  • Jun Zheng,
  • Lin Wang,
  • Jingkun Jiang,
  • Tuukka Petäjä,
  • Federico Bianchi,
  • Markku Kulmala

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/20964471.2020.1798707
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 3
pp. 295 – 321

Abstract

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Due to profound impact on climate and human health, air quality has attracted attention from all levels of the civil society. The key step in the provision of required tools for the society to tackle the complex air quality problem is to characterize it in a comprehensive manner with a long-term perspective. Here, we describe a continuous and comprehensive observation station and its accompanying state-of-the-art instrumentation that was established to investigate the complex urban atmospheric environment in a rapidly developing Chinese Megacity. The station, located in downtown Beijing, aims to study air quality by identifying the major atmospheric pollutants and key processes determining their formation and loss mechanisms. A few hundreds of parameters are continuously measured with the state-of-the-art instruments, including trace gas concentrations, aerosol particle size distributions, and mass concentrations, covering aerosol particle chemical composition from molecules to micrometer-sized aerosol particles. This produced long-term, comprehensive big data with around $$1 \times {10^{11}}$$ bytes per year. In this paper, we provide an overview on the facilities of the station, the instrumentation used, the workflow of continuous observations and examples of results from 2018 to 2019 and a basis for establishing a modern long-term, comprehensive atmospheric urban observation station in other megacities.

Keywords