Abstract

Abstract. Under a high atmospheric oxidization capacity, the synergistic effect of the physicochemical processes in the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) caused summer haze pollution in Beijing. The southern and southwestern areas, generally 60–300 km away from Beijing, were seriously polluted in contrast to Beijing, which remained clean. Southerly winds moving faster than 20–30 km h−1 since the early morning primarily caused haze pollution initiation. The PM2.5 (particulate matter with a dynamic equivalent diameter smaller than 2.5 µm) level increased to 75 µg m−3 over several hours during the daytime, which was simultaneously affected by the ABL structure. Additionally, the O3 concentration was quite high during the daytime (250 µg m−3), corresponding to a high atmospheric oxidation capacity. Much sulfate and nitrate were produced through active atmospheric chemical processes, with sulfur oxidation ratios (SORs) up to ∼0.76 and nitrogen oxidation ratios (NORs) increasing from 0.09 to 0.26, which further facilitated particulate matter (PM) level enhancement. However, the increase in sulfate was mainly linked to southerly transport. At midnight, the PM2.5 concentration sharply increased from 75 to 150 µg m−3 over 4 h and remained at its highest level until the next morning. Under an extremely stable ABL structure, secondary aerosol formation dominated by nitrate was quite intense, driving the haze pollution outbreak. The PM levels in the southern and southeastern areas of Beijing were significantly lower than those in Beijing at this time, even below air quality standards; thus, the contribution of pollution transport had almost disappeared. With the formation of a nocturnal stable boundary layer (NSBL) at an altitude ranging from 0–0.3 km, the extremely low turbulence kinetic energy (TKE) ranging from 0 to 0.05 m2 s−2 inhibited the spread of particles and moisture, ultimately resulting in elevated near-surface PM2.5 and relative humidity (∼90 %) levels. Due to the very high humidity and ambient oxidization capacity, NOR rapidly increased from 0.26 to 0.60, and heterogeneous hydrolysis reactions at the moist particle surface were very notable. The nitrate concentration steeply increased from 11.6 to 57.8 µg m−3, while the sulfate and organics concentrations slightly increased by 6.1 and 3.1 µg m−3, respectively. With clean and strong winds passing through Beijing, the stable ABL dissipated with the potential temperature gradient becoming negative and the ABL height (ABLH) increasing to ∼2.5 km. The high turbulence activity with a TKE ranging from 3 to 5 m2 s−2 notably promoted pollution diffusion. The self-cleaning capacity of the atmosphere is commonly responsible for air pollution dispersion. However, reducing the atmospheric oxidization capacity, through strengthening collaborative control of nitrogen oxide (NOx) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs), as well as continuously deepening regional joint air pollution control, is urgent.

Highlights

  • This discrepancy in the variation trend between O3 and PM2.5 may be attributed to inappropriate reduction ratios of nitrogen oxide (NOx) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in PM2.5-control-oriented emission reduction measures, which mainly focus on NOx reduction

  • The occurrence of haze pollution in summer in Beijing was mainly attributed to southerly transport and influenced by the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) structure to a certain degree, which was further promoted by intense secondary aerosol formation under a high atmospheric oxidation capacity

  • The physical process, where large amounts of moisture and particles were transported to Beijing by strong southerly winds, caused haze pollution initiation in Beijing, consistent with previous studies, e.g., Huang et al (2017) and Zhong et al (2019)

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Summary

Introduction

Due to a series of stringent emission control measures (China’s State Council 2013 Action Plan for Air Pollution Prevention and Control available at http://www.gov.cn/ zhengce/content/2013-09/13/content_4561.htm, last access: 13 April 2020), including shutting down heavily polluting factories and replacing coal with clean energy sources, the annual mean PM2.5 (particulate matter with a dynamic equivalent diameter smaller than 2.5 μm) concentration in major regions, especially in Beijing, has continuously decreased in recent years (Chen et al, 2019; G. Liu et al, 2019; J. Cheng et al, 2019; Ding et al, 2019). Regarding the causes of particulate matter (PM) pollution, numerous previous studies have reported that stationary synoptic conditions, local emissions and regional transport, an adverse atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) structure, and meteorological conditions as well as secondary aerosol formation are major factors in haze pollution formation Previous studies have demonstrated that intense atmospheric photochemical reactions in summer enhanced secondary aerosol formation and led to the synchronous occurrence of high PM2.5 and O3 concentrations on a regional scale (Pathak et al, 2009; Wang et al, 2016; Shi et al, 2015). The mechanisms of how the overall regional transport, ABL structure, meteorological conditions and secondary aerosol formation interact to quantitatively influence haze pollution under a high atmospheric oxidization capacity in summer remain unclear.

Instruments and related data
Other datasets
Typical air pollution episodes in summer in Beijing
The occurrence stage
The outbreak stage
The diffusion stage
Conclusion
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