Abstract

Abstract. Many field experiments have found high nitrous acid (HONO) mixing ratios in both urban and rural areas during daytime, but these high daytime HONO mixing ratios cannot be explained well by gas-phase production, HONO emissions, and nighttime hydrolysis conversion of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) on aerosols, suggesting that an unknown daytime HONO source (Punknown) could exist. The formula Punknown ≈ 19.60[NO2] · J(NO2) was obtained using observed data from 13 field experiments across the globe. The three additional HONO sources (i.e., the Punknown, nighttime hydrolysis conversion of NO2 on aerosols, and HONO emissions) were coupled into the WRF-Chem model (Weather Research and Forecasting model coupled with Chemistry) to assess the Punknown impacts on the concentrations and budgets of HONO and peroxy (hydroxyl, hydroperoxyl, and organic peroxy) radicals (ROx) (= OH + HO2 + RO2) in the coastal regions of China. Results indicated that the additional HONO sources produced a significant improvement in HONO and OH simulations, particularly in the daytime. High daytime average Punknown values were found in the coastal regions of China, with a maximum of 2.5 ppb h−1 in the Beijing–Tianjin–Hebei region. The Punknown produced a 60–250 % increase of OH, HO2, and RO2 near the ground in the major cities of the coastal regions of China, and a 5–48 % increase of OH, HO2, and RO2 in the daytime meridional-mean mixing ratios within 1000 m above the ground. When the three additional HONO sources were included, the photolysis of HONO was the second most important source in the OH production rate in Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou before 10:00 LST with a maximum of 3.72 ppb h−1 and a corresponding Punknown contribution of 3.06 ppb h−1 in Beijing, whereas the reaction of HO2 + NO (nitric oxide) was dominant after 10:00 LST with a maximum of 9.38 ppb h−1 and a corresponding Punknown contribution of 7.23 ppb h−1 in Beijing. The whole ROx cycle was accelerated by the three additional HONO sources, especially the Punknown. The daytime average OH production rate was enhanced by 0.67 due to the three additional HONO sources; [0.64], due to the Punknown, to 4.32 [3.86] ppb h−1, via the reaction of HO2 + NO, and by 0.49 [0.47] to 1.86 [1.86] ppb h−1, via the photolysis of HONO. The OH daytime average loss rate was enhanced by 0.58 [0.55] to 2.03 [1.92] ppb h−1, via the reaction of OH + NO2, and by 0.31 [0.28] to 1.78 [1.64] ppb h−1, via the reaction of OH + CO (carbon monoxide) in Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou. Similarly, the three additional HONO sources produced an increase of 0.31 [0.28] (with a corresponding Punknown contribution) to 1.78 [1.64] ppb h−1, via the reaction of OH + CO, and 0.10 [0.09] to 0.63 [0.59] ppb h−1, via the reaction of CH3O2 (methylperoxy radical) + NO in the daytime average HO2 production rate, and 0.67 [0.61] to 4.32 [4.27] ppb h−1, via the reaction of HO2 + NO in the daytime average HO2 loss rate in Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou. The above results suggest that the Punknown considerably enhanced the ROx concentrations and accelerated ROx cycles in the coastal regions of China, and could produce significant increases in concentrations of inorganic aerosols and secondary organic aerosols and further aggravate haze events in these regions.

Highlights

  • The hydroxyl radical (OH) is the most dominant oxidant in the troposphere, initiating daytime photochemistry, removing the majority of reactive gases, and leading to the formation of secondary products (e.g., ozone (O3), PANs, and aerosol) that can affect air quality, climate, and human health (Stone et al, 2012)

  • Li et al (2014) suggested that high HONO mixing ratios in the residual layer in the studied Po Valley in Italy were mainly from a gas-phase source (SHONO) that consumed nitrogen oxides (NOx) (Li et al, 2015), and SHONO was proportional to the photolysis frequency of HONO [J (HONO)], basically consistent with our result that the Punknown was proportional to NO2] · J (NO2) mixing ratios and the photolysis frequency of NO2 [J (NO2)]

  • Two domains with a horizontal resolution of 27 km were employed in this study: domain 1 covered East Asia, whereas domain 2 covered the coastal regions of China, including the Beijing– Tianjin–Hebei region (BTH), the Yangtze River delta (YRD), and the Pearl River delta (PRD) (Fig. 3), which are the three most rapidly developing economic growth regions of China

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Summary

Introduction

The hydroxyl radical (OH) is the most dominant oxidant in the troposphere, initiating daytime photochemistry, removing the majority of reactive gases, and leading to the formation of secondary products (e.g., ozone (O3), PANs (peroxyacyl nitrates), and aerosol) that can affect air quality, climate, and human health (Stone et al, 2012). High correlations between the Punknown and NO2 mixing ratios have been found (e.g., R2 = 0.77 in Qin et al, 2006, R2 = 0.80 in Villena et al, 2011, and R2 = 0.62 in Elshorbany et al, 2009), indicating that the photosensitized conversion of NO2 is more likely to be the daytime HONO source This is the reason why the recent CalNex 2010 (California Research at the Nexus of Air Quality and Climate Change) study found a very strong positive correlation (R2 = 0.985). We added the Punknown into the WRF-Chem model to assess the impacts of the Punknown on the concentrations and production and loss rates of HONO, OH, HO2, and organic peroxy radicals (RO2)

Observed data
Parameterization of HONO sources
Model setup
Comparison of simulations and observations
Punknown simulations and its impacts on production and loss rates of HONO
Conclusions
Full Text
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