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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

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In this paper, 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.
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This article is published in Atmospheric Environment.The article was published on 2016-11-01 and is currently open access. It has received 26 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Haze & Total organic carbon.

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Sources and formation of carbonaceous aerosols in Xi'an, China: primary emissions and secondary formation constrained by radiocarbon

TL;DR: Based on the 14C content in elemental carbon (EC), organic carbon (OC) and water-insoluble OC(WIOC), contributions of major sources to carbonaceous aerosols are estimated over a whole seasonal cycle: primary and secondary fossil sources, primary biomass burning, and other non-fossil carbon formed by secondary processes as discussed by the authors.
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Optimizing isolation protocol of organic carbon and elemental carbon for 14C analysis using fine particulate samples

TL;DR: In this article, a coupled carbon analyzer and high-vacuum setup was established to collect atmospheric organic carbon (OC) and elemental carbon (EC) and investigated the correlations between 14 C levels and mass recoveries of OC and EC using urban PM 2.5 samples.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sources of non-fossil-fuel emissions in carbonaceous aerosols during early winter in Chinese cities

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used radiocarbon (14C) and molecular organic tracers (MOC tracers) to identify the carbon sources of air pollution in China.
References
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Air pollution and health.

TL;DR: The evidence for adverse effects on health of selected air pollutants is discussed, and it is unclear whether a threshold concentration exists for particulate matter and ozone below which no effect on health is likely.
Journal ArticleDOI

Atmospheric aerosols: composition, transformation, climate and health effects.

TL;DR: The current state of knowledge, major open questions, and research perspectives on the properties and interactions of atmospheric aerosols and their effects on climate and human health are outlined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Climate Effects of Black Carbon Aerosols in China and India

TL;DR: A global climate model used to investigate possible aerosol contributions to trends in China and India found precipitation and temperature changes in the model that were comparable to those observed if the aerosols included a large proportion of absorbing black carbon (“soot”), similar to observed amounts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rethinking Organic Aerosols: Semivolatile Emissions and Photochemical Aging

TL;DR: Accounting for partitioning and photochemical processing of primary emissions creates a more regionally distributed aerosol and brings model predictions into better agreement with observations, attribute this unexplained secondary organic-aerosol production to the oxidation of low-volatility gas-phase species.
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Q1. What are the contributions in "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" ?

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 Junwen Liu a, b, Jun Li a, *, Matthias Vonwiller b, c, Di Liu a, Hairong Cheng d, Kaijun Shen a, Gary Salazar b, Konstantinos Agrios b, c, Yanlin Zhang b, c, 1, Quanfu He a, Xiang Ding a, Guangcai Zhong a, Xinming Wang a, Sönke Szidat b, * *, Gan Zhang a a State Key Laboratory of Organic Geochemistry, Guangzhou Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou, 510640, China b Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry & Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research, University of Bern, Berne, 3012, Switzerland c Laboratory of Radiochemistry, Paul Scherrer Institute, Villigen-PSI, 5232, Switzerland d Department of Environmental Engineering, School of Resource and Environmental Science, Wuhan University, Wuhan, 430079, China * Corresponding author. 

Using an aerodyne aerosol chemical speciation monitor, Sun et al. (2014) found that stagnant meteorological conditions, coal combustion, secondary production, and regional transport were the main factors leading to the formation of this haze in Beijing. 

Because a high PM2.5 loading can cause a reduction in visibility, climate changes, and human respiratory-cardiovascular diseases (Brunekreef and Holgate, 2002; Menon et al., 2002; Deng et al., 2008; Wang et al., 2014b), many concerns were raised by the public, government, and scientists. 

These carbon particles in the atmosphere have two sources: fossil fuel (FF, e.g., from traffic exhaust, coal combustion, industry) and non-fossil (NF, e.g., from open/forest fire, biofuel burning, biogenic emission) emissions. 

A source-apportionment method for OC, including primary and secondary sources, was implemented using the measured carbon fractions, anhydrosugars, and 14C isotopic signals. 

According to the annual report of the Editorial Department of Wuhan Statistical Yearbook-2014, the gross domestic product was composed of agriculture (3.7%), industry (48.6%), and other sectors (47.7%). 

Andersson et al. (2015) found that during this haze period FF sources on average contributed 74%, 68% and 68% to EC in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, respectively. 

To determine the origins of haze particles, the authors measured 14C isotopic signals and unique organic tracers in PM2.5 samples with various levels in Wuhan (Fig. S1), the largest (~550 km2) and most densely populated metropolis (~10 million) in central China. 

Values of fm for WSOC and TC were calculated from the isotopic mass conservation, and the fm(OC) values reported here were corrected by a field blank (0.45 µg C/cm2; fm = 0.61 ± 0.02). 

These results suggest that biomass burning is an important driver for the haze phenomenon in Chinese cities, which probably because the burning of biofuel is still very extensive in China, especially in winter season. 

this large-scale haze crisis was very likely caused by the convergence of materials from numerous point sources in regions with different sources. 

These results show a significantly dominant influence of BB on OCnf_sec during this long-lasting winter haze, corresponding to the very low levels of biogenic VOCs in winter. 

In this study, a rough estimation of SOCbb (SOCbb = OCnf_sec - SOCbio) was obtained based on the combination of 14C and molecular markers of biogenic emissions (Table S2).