Abstract

Open field burning of crop residue has been intentionally prohibited due to the undesired air pollution in urban regions. To better balance the urban environment and agricultural activity, this paper conducted a feasibility study of prescribed burning for crop residues based on air quality assessment in urban regions. Firstly, emission inventories were established using the top-down approach based on designed sub-regional fire as prescribed burning. Subsequently, the air qualities in urban regions were simulated by the coupled Weather Research and Forecasting Model-Community Multi-scale Air Quality Model (WRF-CMAQ) covering different sensitivity experiments. Finally, PM2.5 is selected as the main indicator of air quality, and the feasibility was assessed by controlling the factors influencing the diffusion of pollutants from prescribed burning, including burning ratio, meteorological factors (wind speed and direction), distance from burning area and burning duration. It is revealed that prescribed burning would achieve highly efficient disposal of crop residues under the premise of ensuring the air quality in urban regions by controlling the factors. Results in the study can be further exploited for designing burning scheme for crop residue, which is expected to promote a sustainable development of agriculture and urban environment.

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