Nitrate formation from heterogeneous uptake of dinitrogen pentoxide during a severe winter haze in southern China

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Abstract

Nitrate (NO 3- ) has become a major component of fine particulate matter (PM 2:5 ) during hazy days in China. However, the role of the heterogeneous reactions of dinitrogen pentoxide (N 2 O 5 ) in nitrate formation is not well constrained. In January 2017, a severe haze event occurred in the Pearl River Delta (PRD) of southern China during which high levels of PM 2:5 (∼ 400 μgm -3 ) and O 3 (∼ 160 ppbv) were observed at a semi-rural site (Heshan) in the western PRD. Nitrate concentrations reached 108 μgm -3 (1 h time resolution), and the contribution of nitrate to PM 2:5 was nearly 40 %. Concurrent increases in NO3 and ClNO2 (with a maximum value of 8.3 ppbv at a 1 min time resolution) were observed in the first several hours after sunset, indicating an intense N 2 O 5 heterogeneous uptake by aerosols. The formation potential of N- 3 via N 2 O 5 heterogeneous reactions was estimated to be between 29.0 and 77.3 gm3 in the early hours (2 to 6 h) after sunset based on the measurement data, which could completely explain the measured increase in the NO -3 concentration during the same time period. Daytime production of nitric acid from the gasphase reaction of OHCNO2 was calculated with a chemical box model built using the Master Chemical Mechanism (MCM v3.3.1) and constrained by the measurement data. The integrated nocturnal nitrate formed via N 2 O 5 chemistry was comparable to or even higher than the nitric acid formed during the day. This study confirms that N 2 O 5 heterogeneous chemistry was a significant source of aerosol nitrate during hazy days in southern China.

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Yun, H., Wang, W., Wang, T., Xia, M., Yu, C., Wang, Z., … Zhou, Y. (2018). Nitrate formation from heterogeneous uptake of dinitrogen pentoxide during a severe winter haze in southern China. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 18(23), 17515–17527. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-18-17515-2018

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