Abstract

The concentration of PM2.5 has considerably reduced in recent years, but remains relatively high in China. In particular, the increasing contribution of organic compounds to PM2.5 generates popular pressure for further reductions, resulting in an urgent need to study organic aerosol (OA). To investigate the molecular composition and source contribution of OA in the rural area of the Guanzhong Plain, Northwest China, PM2.5 samples were collected during 3–23 August 2016 and 5–20 January 2017 and studied for more than 100 organic tracer compounds. The mean concentration of total measured organic compounds is 662 ± 296 ng/m3 in summer and 3258 ± 1925 ng/m3 in winter. Levoglucosan is the most abundant single compound found throughout the sampling period, which is a crucial tracer for biomass burning emissions, preliminary suggesting that biomass burning is an essential source of OA. In summer, organic compounds such as lipid compounds, sugar compounds, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), more come from higher plants, wood burning, vehicle exhausts, plastic waste, and other direct emission sources. Oxygenated PAHs (OPAHs), nitrophenols, and phthalic acids more come from the atmosphere through the oxidation reaction of aromatic precursors, especially photochemical oxidation. However, in winter, most of the increases in concentrations of organic compounds are attributed to biomass burning. The analysis of a haze event (14–19 January 2017) during the winter sampling period shows that the increases in the concentration of organic compounds are unaccompanied by strong secondary formation under lower relative humidity (49.1% ± 13.5%). The main reason for the growth of OA in this haze event is the accumulation of primary OA (POA). The source apportionment by the positive matrix factorization (PMF) model shows that biomass burning (37.1%) is the primary source of OA in the rural regions of the Guanzhong Plain, especially in winter (40.6%). The contribution of secondary formation decreases from 26.0% in summer to 16.9% in winter, and the contribution of fossil fuel emissions is comparable across both seasons.

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