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Relative humidity driven nocturnal HONO formation mechanism in autumn haze events of Beijing

Environmental Studies and Forestry

Relative humidity driven nocturnal HONO formation mechanism in autumn haze events of Beijing

H. Xuan, J. Liu, et al.

Dive into groundbreaking research conducted by Huiying Xuan, Jun Liu, Yaqi Zhao, and others as they unveil the underestimated mechanisms behind nitrous acid formation during autumn haze in Beijing. Discover how innovative modeling techniques reveal critical HONO sources that could change the way we understand air quality and haze events. This study is essential for understanding the dynamics of hydroxyl radicals and their impact on the atmosphere.... show more
Abstract
Nitrous acid (HONO), a key precursor of hydroxyl radicals (OH), is one of the factors affecting atmospheric chemistry and air quality. Currently, the proposed sources of HONO are not able to fully explain observed HONO concentrations. In this study, a comprehensive field observation of HONO was conducted in the autumn of 2021 in urban Beijing. The box model using a default Master Chemical Mechanism (MCM) was unable to reproduce the observed HONO concentrations with a normalized mean bias (NMB) of -92.8%. The NMB improved to -46.1% after the inclusion of seven additional HONO formation pathways. Several factors like vehicle emission factor (1.23%) and nocturnal NO2 heterogeneous uptake coefficient on the ground surface (8.25 × 10^-5) were calculated based on observational data. The enhancement factor for nocturnal NO2 heterogeneous conversion was established as a function of relative humidity (RH) and incorporated into the model, which compensated for the missing nocturnal HONO sources and well-reproduced the observed HONO concentrations, with an NMB of -5.1%. The major source of HONO at night was found to be the heterogeneous reaction of NO2 on the ground surface, contributing up to 85.6%. During the daytime, it was the homogeneous reaction of NO with OH, accounting for 41.8%. The daytime primary source of OH was mainly the photolysis of HONO, which constituted 73.6% and therefore promoted the formation of secondary pollutants and exacerbated haze events.
Publisher
npj Climate and Atmospheric Science
Published On
Aug 23, 2024
Authors
Huiying Xuan, Jun Liu, Yaqi Zhao, Qing Cao, Tianzeng Chen, Yonghong Wang, Zirui Liu, Xu Sun, Hao Li, Peng Zhang, Biwu Chu, Qingxin Ma, Hong He
Tags
nitrous acid
HONO
autumn haze
air quality
modeling techniques
NO2 conversion
hydroxyl radicals
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