4.7 Article

Formation, radiative forcing, and climatic effects of severe regional haze

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS
Volume 22, Issue 7, Pages 4951-4967

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/acp-22-4951-2022

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Texas A&M University (TAMU)
  2. Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC)

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This study investigates severe regional haze events in Northern China, identifying the complex interplay between primary emissions, secondary formation, and conducive meteorological conditions. The study finds that the interaction between aerosols and the planetary boundary layer leads to the amplification of haze severity on the ground level. The study also highlights the importance of reducing black carbon emissions to improve air quality and mitigate the positive radiative forcing.
Severe regional haze events, which are characterized by exceedingly high levels of fine particulate matter (PM), occur frequently in many developing countries (such as China and India), with profound implications for human health, weather, and climate. The occurrence of the haze extremes involves a complex interplay between primary emissions, secondary formation, and conducive meteorological conditions, and the relative contributions of the various processes remain unclear. Here we investigated severe regional haze episodes in 2013 over the Northern China Plain (NCP), by evaluating the PM production and the interactions between elevated PM and the planetary boundary layer (PBL). Analysis of the ground-based measurements and satellite observations of PM properties shows nearly synchronized temporal PM variations among the three megacities (Beijing, Baoding, and Shijiazhuang) in this region and a coincidence of the aerosol optical depth (AOD) hotspots with the three megacities during the polluted period. During the clean-to-hazy transition, the measured oxygenated organic aerosol concentration ([OOA]) well correlates with the odd-oxygen concentration ([O-x] = [O-3] + [NO2]), and the mean [OOA] / [O-x] ratio in Beijing is much larger than those in other megacities (such as Mexico City and Houston), indicating highly efficient photochemical activity. Simulations using the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model coupled with an explicit aerosol radiative module reveal that strong aerosol-PBL interaction during the polluted period results in a suppressed and stabilized PBL and elevated humidity, triggering a positive feedback to amplify the haze severity at the ground level. Model sensitivity study illustrates the importance of black carbon (BC) in the haze-PBL interaction and the aerosol regional climatic effect, contributing to more than 30 % of the PBL collapse and about half of the positive radiative forcing on the top of the atmosphere. Overall, severe regional haze exhibits strong negative radiative forcing (cooling) of -63 to -88 W m(-2) at the surface and strong positive radiative forcing (warming) of 57 to 82 W m(-2) in the atmosphere, with a slightly negative net radiative forcing of about -6 W m(-2) on the top of the atmosphere. Our work establishes a synthetic view for the dominant regional features during severe haze events, unraveling rapid in situ PM production and inefficient transport, both of which are amplified by atmospheric stagnation. On the other hand, regional transport sufficiently disperses gaseous aerosol precursors (e.g., sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, volatile organic compounds, and ammonia) during the clean period, which subsequently result in rapid in situ PM production via photochemistry during the transition period and via multiphase chemistry during the polluted period. Our findings highlight the co-benefits for reduction in BC emissions, which not only improve local and regional air quality by minimizing air stagnation but also mitigate the global warming by alleviating the positive direct radiative forcing.

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