The importance of non-fossil sources in carbonaceous aerosols in a megacity of central China during the 2013 winter haze episode: A source apportionment constrained by radiocarbon and organic tracers
Options
BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
Description
To determine the causes of a severe haze episode in January 2013 in China, a source apportionment of different carbonaceous aerosols (CAs) was conducted in a megacity in central China (Wuhan, Hubei Province) by using the measurements of radiocarbon and molecular organic tracers. Non-fossil sources (e.g., domestic biofuel combustion and biogenic emissions) were found to be responsible for 62% ± 5% and 26% ± 8% of organic carbon (OC) and elemental carbon (EC) components by mass, respectively. Nonfossil sources contributed 57% ± 4% to total CAs in this large-scale haze event, whereas fossil-fuel sources were less dominant (43% ± 4%). The CAs were composed of secondary organic carbon (SOC; 46% ± 10%), primary fossil-fuel carbon (29% ± 4%) and primary biomass-burning carbon (25% ± 10%). Although SOC was formed mainly from non-fossil sources (70% ± 4%), the role of fossil precursors was substantial (30% ± 4%), much higher than at the global scale. Combined measurement of organic tracers and radiocarbon showed that most non-fossil SOC was probably derived from biomass burning during this long-lasting haze episode in central China.
Date of Publication
2016-11
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Liu, Junwen | |
Li, Jun | |
Liu, Di | |
Cheng, Hairong | |
Shen, Kaijun | |
He, Quanfu | |
Ding, Xiang | |
Zhong, Guangcai | |
Wang, Xinming | |
Zhang, Gan |
Additional Credits
Series
Atmospheric environment
Publisher
Pergamon
ISSN
1352-2310
Access(Rights)
open.access