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Hairong Cheng

Researcher at Wuhan University

Publications -  57
Citations -  2862

Hairong Cheng is an academic researcher from Wuhan University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Environmental science & Particulates. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 52 publications receiving 2211 citations. Previous affiliations of Hairong Cheng include Chinese Academy of Sciences & Jianghan University.

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Sources of ambient volatile organic compounds and their contributions to photochemical ozone formation at a site in the Pearl River Delta, southern China.

TL;DR: Sensitivity analysis revealed that the sources of "diesel vehicular emissions, "biomass/biofuel burning" and "solvent usage 1" had low uncertainties whereas "gasoline evaporation" showed the highest uncertainty.
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Seasonal variations and chemical characteristics of PM2.5 in Wuhan, central China

TL;DR: The high annual mean concentrations of PM2.5 indicated that the air pollution from vehicle exhaust emission and coal burning in Wuhan was serious and noteworthy.
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Tropospheric volatile organic compounds in China

TL;DR: This paper reviews the main studies conducted in China on the characteristics and sources of VOCs, their relationship with O3 and SOA, and their removal technology, and provides an integrated literature review on the formulation and implementation of effective control strategies of V OCs and photochemical smog.
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Which emission sources are responsible for the volatile organic compounds in the atmosphere of Pearl River Delta

TL;DR: The percentage contribution of vehicular emission in Hong Kong in 2007 is close to that obtained in 2001-2003, whereas in inland PRD the contribution of solvent use to ambient VOCs in 2007 was at the upper range of the results obtained in previous studies and twice the 2006 PRD emission inventory.
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Formaldehyde and volatile organic compounds in Hong Kong homes: concentrations and impact factors

TL;DR: The results can help housing designers, builders, home residents, and housing department of the government to improve indoor air quality by means of appropriate building materials, clean household products and proper life styles, and help policy makers reconcile the IAQ objectives and guidelines.