Wintertime nitrate formation pathways in the North China Plain:
Importance of N2O5 heterogeneous hydrolysis
Abstract
Nitrate aerosols, formed via nitric acid (HNO) to balance inorganic
cations in the particle phase, have constituted a major fraction of fine
particulate matters (PM) during wintertime haze events in the North
China Plain(NCP), with a progressively increasing contribution to
PMmass. HNOis produced through homogeneous and heterogeneous pathways in
the atmosphere, but the contribution of the two pathways to nitrate
remains elusive. Simulations of a wintertime haze event in the NCP using
a source-oriented WRF-Chem model reveal that the homogeneous and
heterogeneous pathways contribute 48.4% and 51.6% of near-surface
nitrate mass on average, respectively. The heterogeneous pathway
dominates the nighttime HNOproduction in the planetary boundary layer,
with an average contribution of 83%. Although NOis photolytically
liable during daytime, the heterogeneous NOhydrolysis still contributes
10% of HNO. Our study highlights the significantly important role of
NOheterogeneous hydrolysis in the nitrate formation during wintertime
haze days.