| Literature DB >> 33839614 |
Saifi Izhar1, Tarun Gupta2, Adnan Mateen Qadri3, Arnico K Panday4.
Abstract
This paper reports the chemical and light extinction characteristics of fine aerosol (PM2.5) during the winter period (2017-18) at Lumbini, Nepal, a rural site on the Indo Gangetic Plains. A modified IMPROVE algorithm was employed to reconstruct light extinction by chemical constituents of aerosol. The fine aerosol levels impacted visibility adversely during daytime, but during nighttime visibility was controlled by fog droplets rather than by aerosols. The PM2.5 chemical constituents showed varying characteristics during clear and polluted days. The average NO3-/SO42- concentration ratio was 0.57 during clear and 1.36 and polluted days, signifying a change in secondary inorganics and formation processes mainly due to decreasing photochemical production and due to increased partitioning of nitrate particles at a lower temperature. The increased secondary organics contribution and the higher OM/OC ratio (2.2) during polluted days showed the vital role of aqueous processing and biomass burning emissions in determining the concentration of organics. Total light extinction was 2.3 times higher on polluted days compared to clear days, while the PM2.5 mass concentration was 1.5 times higher. This variation in mass and extinction order signifies that various chemical components in fine particles have a more considerable impact on light extinction. On clear days we found that carbonaceous particles (OM and EC) made a major contribution to light extinction. In contrast, the extinction contribution by secondary inorganic (especially NH4NO3) increased significantly during polluted days, with hygroscopic growth and enhanced scattering efficiency at higher RH conditions playing a major role. The comparison between clear and polluted days altogether suggests that regulating the nitrate sources can help significantly in improving the visibility levels and restrict fog haze development during wintertime in rural IGP.Entities:
Keywords: IMPROVE; Nitrate; OM/OC ratio; PM(2.5); Visibility
Year: 2021 PMID: 33839614 DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2021.117034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Pollut ISSN: 0269-7491 Impact factor: 8.071