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Soil Emissions of Reactive Nitrogen Accelerate Summertime Surface Ozone Increases in the North China Plain

  • Wanshan Tan
  • , Haolin Wang
  • , Jiayin Su
  • , Ruize Sun
  • , Cheng He
  • , Xiao Lu*
  • , Jintai Lin
  • , Chaoyang Xue
  • , Haichao Wang
  • , Yiming Liu
  • , Lei Liu
  • , Lin Zhang
  • , Dianming Wu
  • , Yujing Mu
  • , Shaojia Fan
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Sun Yat-Sen University
  • Guangdong Provincial Observation and Research Station for Climate Environment and Air Quality Change in the Pearl River Estuary
  • Ministry of Education of the People's Republic of China
  • Peking University
  • CAS - Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences
  • Université d'Orléans
  • Lanzhou University
  • East China Normal University
  • Institute of Eco-Chongming
  • University of Chinese Academy of Sciences

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Summertime surface ozone in China has been increasing since 2013 despite the policy-driven reduction in fuel combustion emissions of nitrogen oxides (NOx). Here we examine the role of soil reactive nitrogen (Nr, including NOx and nitrous acid (HONO)) emissions in the 2013-2019 ozone increase over the North China Plain (NCP), using GEOS-Chem chemical transport model simulations. We update soil NOx emissions and add soil HONO emissions in GEOS-Chem based on observation-constrained parametrization schemes. The model estimates significant daily maximum 8 h average (MDA8) ozone enhancement from soil Nr emissions of 8.0 ppbv over the NCP and 5.5 ppbv over China in June-July 2019. We identify a strong competing effect between combustion and soil Nr sources on ozone production in the NCP region. We find that soil Nr emissions accelerate the 2013-2019 June-July ozone increase over the NCP by 3.0 ppbv. The increase in soil Nr ozone contribution, however, is not primarily driven by weather-induced increases in soil Nr emissions, but by the concurrent decreases in fuel combustion NOx emissions, which enhance ozone production efficiency from soil by pushing ozone production toward a more NOx-sensitive regime. Our results reveal an important indirect effect from fuel combustion NOx emission reduction on ozone trends by increasing ozone production from soil Nr emissions, highlighting the necessity to consider the interaction between anthropogenic and biogenic sources in ozone mitigation in the North China Plain.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)12782-12793
Number of pages12
JournalEnvironmental Science and Technology
Volume57
Issue number34
DOIs
StatePublished - 29 Aug 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • GEOS-Chem model simulation
  • Interaction
  • Ozone trend
  • Reactive nitrogen
  • Soil emissions

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