Abstract
Haze is a serious pollution problem during the wintertime in North China. In this study, we investigated how the periodic cycle of winter haze events affect the environmental behaviors of two typical persistent organic pollutants, namely, polychlorinated dibenzo- p-dioxins and dibenzofurans (PCDD/Fs) and polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), in the atmosphere of a typical megacity, Beijing. The average atmospheric concentrations of the total di- to octa-CDD/Fs (∑PCDD/Fs: 378.0 pg/m3) and the total mono- to nona-BDEs (∑9hPBDEs: 166.5 pg/m3) during haze episodes increased by 3.6-fold and 1.9-fold compared with those during the nonhaze periods, respectively; and their concentrations both linearly increased with PM2.5 levels and decreased as a power function of the atmospheric boundary layer height. The elevated concentrations could be clearly attributed to the vertically sinking motion of airflow in the midlower troposphere. When a haze event occurred, the partitioning rate of PCDD/Fs and PBDEs into particles was reduced; the largest fraction of the particle-bound ∑PCDD/Fs was shifted from ultrafine particles to accumulation mode particles; and a steady-state model (Li-Ma-Yang model) satisfactorily described the gas-particle partitioning of the PCDD/F and PBDE homologues. The inhalation exposure risk evaluation indicated that special attention should be paid to the increased cancer risk induced by the elevated inhalation intake of PCDD/Fs during haze episodes.
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