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1.
Sci Total Environ ; 862: 160767, 2023 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2150571

ABSTRACT

The COVID-19 epidemic has exerted significant impacts on human health, social and economic activities, air quality and atmospheric chemistry, and potentially on climate change. In this study, an online coupled regional climate-chemistry-aerosol model (RIEMS-Chem) was applied to explore the direct, indirect, and feedback effects of anthropogenic aerosols on radiation, boundary layer meteorology, and fine particulate matter during the COVID-19 lockdown period from 23 January to 8 April 2020 over China. Model performance was validated against a variety of observations for meteorological variables, PM2.5 and its chemical components, aerosol optical properties, as well as shortwave radiation flux, which demonstrated that RIEMS-Chem was able to reproduce the spatial distribution and temporal variation of the above variables reasonably well. During the study period, direct radiative effect (DRE) of anthropogenic aerosols was stronger than indirect radiative effect (IRE) in most regions north of the Yangtze River, whereas IRE dominated over DRE in the Yangtze River regions and South China. In North China, DRE induced larger changes in meteorology and PM2.5 than those induced by IRE, whereas in South China, the changes by IRE were remarkably larger than those by DRE. Emission reduction alone during the COVID-19 lockdown reduced PM2.5 concentration by approximately 32 % on average over East China. As a result, DRE at the surface was weakened by 15 %, whereas IRE changed little over East China, leading to a decrease in total radiative effect (TRE) by approximately 7 % in terms of domain average. The DRE-induced changes in meteorology and PM2.5 were weakened due to emission reduction, whereas the IRE-induced changes were almost the same between the cases with and without emission reductions. By aerosol radiative and feedback effects, the COVID-19 emission reductions resulted in 0.06 °C and 0.04 °C surface warming, 1.6 and 4.0 µg m-3 PM2.5 decrease, 0.4 and 1.3 mm precipitation increase during the lockdown period in 2020 in terms of domain average over North China and South China, respectively, whereas the lockdown caused negligible changes on average over East Asia.


Subject(s)
Air Pollutants , Air Pollution , COVID-19 , Humans , Particulate Matter/analysis , Air Pollutants/analysis , Meteorology , Feedback , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Communicable Disease Control , Respiratory Aerosols and Droplets , Air Pollution/analysis , China/epidemiology
2.
Atmos Pollut Res ; 13(6): 101424, 2022 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1803525

ABSTRACT

A regional air quality model system (RAQMS) driven by the Weather Research and Forecasting model (WRF) is applied to investigate the distribution and evolution of mineral dust and anthropogenic aerosols over China in April 2020, when air quality was improved due to reduced human activity during the COVID-19 epidemic, whereas dust storms began to attack China and deteriorated air quality. A dust deflation model was developed and improved mineral dust prediction. Model validation demonstrated that RAQMS was able to reproduce PM10, PM2.5 and aerosol components reasonably well. China suffered from three dust events in April 2020, with the maximum hourly PM10 concentrations exceeding 700 µg m-3 in downwind cities over the North China Plain (NCP). Mineral dust dominated PM10 mass (>80%) over the Gobi deserts in north and west China, while it comprised approximately 30-50% of PM10 over wide areas of east China. The domain and monthly mean dust mass fractions in PM10 were estimated to be 47% and 43% over the North China Plain and east China, respectively. On average, mineral dust contributed up to 22% and 21% of PM2.5 mass over the North China Plain and east China in April 2020, respectively. Sulfate and nitrate produced by heterogeneous chemical reactions on dust surface accounted for approximately 9% and 13% of secondary inorganic aerosols (SIA) concentration over the North China Plain and east China, respectively. The results from this study demonstrated that mineral dust made an important contribution to particulate matter mass during the COVID-19 epidemic in spring 2020 over China.

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