Abstract

Rainwater hydrochemistry is an important indicator for tracing anthropogenic input on air quality. As the fastest economically developing city in the northwestern China and the Chinese Loess Plateau, rainwater chemistry, sources of dissolved solutes, and the influence of loess dust on rainwater chemistry in Xi'an city is unclear. Inorganic ions, δD and δ18O of two years' rainwater samples were measured to decipher the above issues. Rainwater samples were weakly alkaline (pH = 7.2) with the mean total dissolved solids (TDS) values of 43 mg/L. NH4+ and Ca2+ dominated in the cations and SO42− and NO3− dominated in the anions. The wet deposition of sulfur (S) and nitrogen (N) was 70.9 ± 67 mg·(m2·month)−1 and 244.8 ± 270.9 mg·(m2·month)−1, respectively. The meteoric water line in Xi'an was δD = 7.29δ18O+3.72 (R2 = 0.99). δD, δ18O, and d-excess analysis indicated the influence of evaporation on the dissolved solutes in rainwater, especially in the dry season. Rainwater acidity in the Xi'an city was mainly neutralized by Ca2+ and NH4+, and the neutralization ability in Xi'an city is higher than the southern China cities. Correlation analysis (CA), positive matrix factorization (PMF), and the backward air masses trajectory model identified high NH4+ and Ca2+ in rainwater were mainly originated from local agricultural activities and loess dust, while NO3− and SO42− were associated with local coal combustion and vehicle exhaust sources. High inputs of dusts and coal combustion in spring and winter resulted in elevated values of pH and major ions in Xi'an. Due to the air pollution control policy, air quality in Xi'an is getting better in recent years. Our study highlights the influence of anthropogenic activities and loess dusts on the rainwater hydrochemistry in Xi'an and provides important dataset for air pollution control for other cities in semi-arid and arid regions.

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