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- Title
Ozone seasonal evolution and photochemical production regime in polluted troposphere in eastern China derived from high resolution FTS observations.
- Authors
Youwen Sun; Cheng Liu; Palm, Mathias; Vigouroux, Corinne; Qihou Hu; Yuan Tian; Wei Wang; Wenjing Su; Wenqiang Zhang; Changong Shan; Xingwei Xu; Jianguo Liu; Notholt, Justus; Mazière, Martine
- Abstract
A precise knowledge of ozone seasonal evolution and photochemical production regime in polluted troposphere in China has important policy implications for ozone pollution controls especially in megacities where ozone pollution is common throughout the year. In this study, we used tropospheric ozone, CO and HCHO columns derived from high resolution Fourier transform infrared spectrometry (FTS) in Hefei, China, tropospheric NO2 columns deduced from overpass Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI), surface meteorological data, and a back trajectory cluster analysis technique to investigate ozone seasonal evolution and photochemical production regime in eastern China from 2014–2017. A pronounced seasonal cycle for tropospheric ozone is captured by FTS, where high levels of tropospheric ozone occurs in spring and summer, and low levels of tropospheric ozone occurs in autumn and winter. Day-to-day variations in spring and summer are in most cases larger than those in autumn and winter. At the same time, it shows that the tropospheric ozone roughly increases over time at the first half year and reaches the maximum in June, and then it decreases over time at the second half year. Tropospheric ozone columns in June are, on average, 0.5×1018molecules*cm-2 (47.6%) higher than those in December which has a mean value of 1.05×1018 molecules*cm-2. The OMI time series shows similar behaviour. The measured features can basically be reproduced by GEOS-Chem and WRF-Chem data but with slight shifts in the timing of the seasonal maximum. Back trajectories analysis shows that: air pollutions in megacities in central-southern China, northwest China, and the key pollution area, i.e., Yangtze River Delta area in eastern China, dominates the contributions to the observed tropospheric ozone levels, while the contributions from the other two key pollution areas, i.e., Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei in north China and Pearl River Delta in south China, are very small; Air masses generated from polluted areas have more transportations to the observed area in spring and summer than in autumn and winter, and hence have more contributions to the observed tropospheric ozone levels. Correlations between tropospheric ozone and meteorological data disclosed that spring and summer is more favorable to photochemical ozone production than in autumn and winter. Finally, the HCHO/NO2 ratio is used as a proxy to investigate the chemical sensitivity of ozone production (PO3). The results show that the PO3 is mainly NOx limited in summer, while it is mainly VOC or mix VOC-NOx limited in winter. Statistics show that NOx limited, mix VOC-NOx limited, and VOC limited PO3 accounts for 60.1%, 28.7%, and 11%, respectively.
- Subjects
CHINA; SPECTROMETRY; OZONE layer depletion; PHOTOCHEMICAL smog; PHOTOCHEMISTRY; POLLUTION
- Publication
Atmospheric Chemistry & Physics Discussions, 2017, p1
- ISSN
1680-7367
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.5194/acp-2017-1176