Atmospheric oxidation capacity and ozone pollution mechanism in a coastal city of Southeast China: Analysis of a typical photochemical episode by Observation-Based Model

2021 
Abstract. A typical multi-day ozone (O3) pollution event was chosen to explore the atmospheric oxidation capacity (AOC), OH reactivity, radical chemistry, and O3 pollution mechanism in a coastal city of Southeast China, with an Observation-Based Model coupled to the Master Chemical Mechanism (OBM-MCM). The hydroxyl radical (OH) was the predominant oxidant (91±23 %) for daytime AOC, while NO3 radical played an important role for AOC during the nighttime (64±11 %). Oxygenated volatile organic compounds (OVOCs, 30±8 %), NO2 (29±8 %) and CO (25±5 %) were the dominant contributors to OH reactivity, accelerating the production of O3 and recycling of ROx radicals (ROx=OH+HO2+RO2). Photolysis of nitrous acid (HONO, 33±14 %), O3 (25±13 %), formaldehyde (HCHO, 20±5 %), and other OVOCs (17±2 %) were the important primary sources of ROx radicals, which played initiation roles in atmospheric oxidation processes. O3 formation was VOC-sensitive, and controlling emissions of aromatics, alkenes, and long-chain alkanes were benefit for ozone pollution mitigation. Combined with regional transport analysis, the reasons for this O3 episode were the accumulation of local photochemical production and regional transport. The results of sensitivity analysis showed that VOCs were the limiting factor of radical recycling and O3 formation, and the 5 % reduction of O3 would be achieved by decreasing 20 % anthropogenic VOCs. The findings of this study have significant guidance for emission reduction and regional collaboration on future photochemical pollution control in the relatively clean coastal cities of China and similar countries.
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