| Literature DB >> 32325589 |
Fei Zhang1, Xiaona Shang2, Hui Chen3, Guangzhao Xie2, Yao Fu1, Di Wu2, Wenwen Sun2, Pengfei Liu4, Chenglong Zhang4, Yujing Mu4, Limin Zeng5, Mei Wan6, Yuesi Wang7, Hang Xiao8, Gehui Wang9, Jianmin Chen10.
Abstract
The measurement of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) was carried out using an online GC-FID/MS at a rural site in North China Plain from 1 Nov. 2017 to 21 Jan. 2018. Their concentrations, emission ratios and source apportionment are investigated. During the entire experiment period, the average mixing ratio of VOCs was 69.5 ± 51.9 ppb, among which alkanes contributed the most (37% on average). Eight sources were identified in the non-negative matrix factorization (NMF) model as short-chain alkanes (13.3%), biomass burning (4.6%), solvent (10.8%), industry (3.7%), coal combustion (41.1%), background (4.5%), vehicular emission (7.7%) and secondary formation (14.2%). In addition to the formation of OVOCs through photochemical reactions, the primary sources, such as coal combustion, biomass burning, vehicular emission, solvent and industry, can also contribute to OVOCs emissions. High OVOCs emission ratios thus were observed at Wangdu site. Primary emission was estimated to contribute 50%, 45%, 73%, 77%, 40%, and 29% on average to acrolein, acetone, methylvinylketone (MVK), methylethylketone (MEK), methacrolein and n-hexanal according to NMF analysis, respectively, which was well consistent with the contribution from photochemical age method. Secondary organic aerosol formation potential (SOAFP) was evaluated by SOA yield, which was significantly higher under low-NOx condition (13.4 μg m-3 ppm-1) than that under high-NOx condition (3.2 μg m-3 ppm-1). Moreover, the photochemical reactivity and sources of VOCs showed differences in seven observed pollution episodes. Among, the largest OH loss rate and SOAFP were found in severe pollution plumes, which were induced primarily by coal combustion. Therefore, mitigation strategies for severe pollution formation should focus on reducing coal combustion emitted VOCs that lead to SOA formation.Entities:
Keywords: Coal combustion; Emission ratios; OVOCs; SOA formation potential; Source apportionment; Volatile organic compounds
Year: 2020 PMID: 32325589 DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.137617
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Total Environ ISSN: 0048-9697 Impact factor: 7.963