Impact of Urban Pollution on Organic-Mediated New-Particle Formation and Particle Number Concentration in the Amazon Rainforest

A major challenge in assessing the impact of aerosols on climate change is to understand how human activities change aerosol loading and properties relative to the pristine-preindustrial baseline. Here we combine chemical transport simulation and field measurements to investigate the effect of anthr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science & technology 2021-03, Vol.55 (8)
Hauptverfasser: Zhao, Bin, Fast, Jerome D., Donahue, Neil M., Shrivastava, Manish, Schervish, Meredith, Shilling, John E., Gordon, Hamish, Wang, Jian, Gao, Yang, Zaveri, Rahul A., Liu, Ying, Gaudet, Brian
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container_issue 8
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container_title Environmental science & technology
container_volume 55
creator Zhao, Bin
Fast, Jerome D.
Donahue, Neil M.
Shrivastava, Manish
Schervish, Meredith
Shilling, John E.
Gordon, Hamish
Wang, Jian
Gao, Yang
Zaveri, Rahul A.
Liu, Ying
Gaudet, Brian
description A major challenge in assessing the impact of aerosols on climate change is to understand how human activities change aerosol loading and properties relative to the pristine-preindustrial baseline. Here we combine chemical transport simulation and field measurements to investigate the effect of anthropogenic pollution from an isolated metropolis on particle number concentration over the preindustrial-like Amazon rainforest through various new-particle formation (NPF) mechanisms and primary particle emissions. To represent organic-mediated NPF, we employ a state-of-the-art model that systematically simulates the formation chemistry and thermodynamics of extremely low volatility organic compounds as well as their roles in NPF processes, and further update the model to improve organic NPF simulations under human-influenced conditions. Results show that urban pollution from the metropolis increases particle number concentration by a factor of 5–25 over the downwind region (within 200 km from city center) compared to background conditions. Overall, our model indicates that NPF contributes over 70% of the total particle number in the downwind region except immediately adjacent to the sources. Among different NPF mechanisms, the ternary NPF involving organics and sulfuric acid overwhelmingly dominates. The improved understanding of particle formation mechanisms will help better quantify anthropogenic aerosol forcing from pristine-preindustrial times to present day.
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source ACS Publications
subjects aerosol
Amazon rainforest
anthropogenic pollution
environmental modeling
environmental pollution
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
extremely low volatility organic compounds
new-particle formation
organic-mediated
particles
redox reactions
title Impact of Urban Pollution on Organic-Mediated New-Particle Formation and Particle Number Concentration in the Amazon Rainforest
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