Abstract

Nitrate (NO3) radical is an important oxidant in the atmosphere as it regulates the NOx budget and impacts secondary pollutant formation. Here, a long-term observational dataset of NO3-related species at an urban site in Beijing was used to investigate changes in the NO3 budget and their atmospheric impacts during 2013–2019, in this period the Clean Air Actions Plan was carried out in China. We found that (1) changes in NO3 precursors (NO2 and O3) led to a significant increase in NO3 formation in the surface layer in winter but a decrease in summer; (2) a reduction in NOx promoted thermal equilibrium, favoring the formation of NO3 rather than dinitrogen pentoxide (N2O5). The simultaneous decrease in PM2.5, during these years, further weakened the N2O5 heterogeneous uptake; (3) a box model simulation revealed that both the reactions of NO3 with volatile organic compounds (VOC) and N2O5 uptake were weakened in summer, implying that the policy actions implemented help to moderate secondary aerosol formation caused by NO3 and N2O5 chemistry in summer; and (4) during winter, both NO3 + VOC and N2O5 uptake were enhanced. Specifically, for the N2O5 uptake, the rapid increase in NO3 production, or to some extent, NO3 oxidation capacity, far outweighed the negative shift effect, leading to a net enhancement of N2O5 uptake in winter, which indicates that the action policy implemented led to an adverse effect on particulate nitrate formation via N2O5 uptake in winter. This may explain the persistent winter particulate nitrate pollution in recent years. Our results highlight the systematic changes in the NO3 budget between 2013 and 2019 in Beijing, which subsequently affect secondary aerosol formation in different seasons.

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