Abstract

The Twain-Hu basin (THB), covering the lower plain of Hubei and Hunan provinces in Central China, has experienced severe air pollution in recent years. However, the terrain effects of such sub-basin on air quality over the THB have been incomprehensibly understood. A heavy PM2.5 pollution event occurred over the THB during 4–10 January 2019. By using the observations and WRF-Chem simulations, we investigated the underlying mechanisms of sub-basin effects on the air pollution with several sensitivity experiments. Observationally, air pollution in the western THB urban area with an average PM2.5 concentration of 189.8 μg m−3, which was more serious than the eastern urban area with the average PM2.5 concentration of 106.3 μg m−3, reflecting a different influence of topography on air pollution over the THB. Simulation results revealed that the terrain effect can contribute 12.0% to increasing the PM2.5 concentrations in the western THB, but slightly mitigate the pollution extent in the eastern THB with the contribution of −4.6% to PM2.5 during the heavy pollution episode. In particular, the sub-basin terrain was conducive to the accumulation of PM2.5 by regional transport with the contribution of 39.1 %, and contrarily lowered its local pollution by −57.0% via the enhanced atmospheric boundary layer height and ventilation coefficients. Given a heavy air pollution episode occurring over the THB, such inverse contribution of terrain effects reflected a unique importance of sub-basin topography in regional transport of air pollutants for air pollution in central China.

Highlights

  • Twain-Hu basin (THB) via the increased PBLH and ventilation coefficient (VC). Under such topography, air pollution was still exacerbated with high levels of PM2.5 persisting over THB, suggesting the important effect of sub-basin terrain on driving PM2.5 deterioration of regional transport to worsen the air quality in the THB, which was more significant in the western cities

  • From 4 January to 10 January 2019, the THB experienced a heavy air pollution event, which was more serious in the western cities, with an average PM2.5 concentration of 189.8 μg m−3, compared with the eastern cities

  • Four simulation experiments—including E1, E2, E3, and E4—were conducted by WRF-Chem model to evaluate the effects of the sub-basin topography on the air quality over THB, central China

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Summary

A Modeling Case over Central China

Weiyang Hu 1 , Tianliang Zhao 1, * , Yongqing Bai 2, *, Lijuan Shen 1 , Xiaoyun Sun 1 and Yao Gu 1.

Introduction
Data and Methods
Method of Filling the Terrain
Model Configuration and Validation
Numerical Experiments
Descriptions of a Heavy Air Pollution Episode
Potential Effects on Overall Air Quality to the THB
January to 10
Distributions
Conclusions
Full Text
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