37 / 2021-08-12 16:12:36
Multilevel air quality evolution in Shenyang: impact of elevated point emission reduction
Aerosol pollution, Atmospheric visibility, Planetary boundary layer ,Northeast China, Vertical evolution
Abstract Pending
李晓岚 / 中国气象局沈阳大气环境研究所
Visibility observed at different altitudes is favorable to understand the causes of air pollution. We conducted 4-years of observations of visibility at 2.8 m and 60 m and particulate matter (PM) concentrations from 2015 to 2018 in Shenyang, a provincial city in Northeast China. The results indicated that visibility increased with the increasing height in winter (especially at night), and decreased with height in summer (especially at the daytime). PM concentration exhibited opposite vertical variation to visibility, reflecting that visibility degrades with the increase of aerosol concentration in the air. The radiosonde meteorological data showed that weak turbulence in the planetary boundary layer (PBL) in winter favored aerosols’ accumulation near the surface. Whereas in summer, unstable atmospheric conditions, upper-level moister environment, and regional transport of air pollutants resulted in the deterioration of upper-level visibility. Inter-annual variation in the two-level visibility indicated that the upper-level visibility improved more significantly than low-level visibility, much likely due to the reduction in emission of elevated point sources in Shenyang. Our study suggested that strengthening the control of surface non-point emissions is a promising control strategy to improve Shenyang air quality.



 
Important Date
  • Conference Date

    Oct 13

    2021

    to

    Oct 15

    2021

  • Sep 28 2021

    Draft paper submission deadline

  • Oct 08 2021

    Registration deadline

  • Oct 31 2021

    Contribution Submission Deadline

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中国气象学会
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