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    Particle number size distribution and new particle formation in Xiamen, the coastal city of Southeast China in wintertime
    WANG Jing; LI Mengren*; LI Lingjun; ZHENG Ronghua; FAN Xiaolong; HONG Youwei; XU Lingling; CHEN Jinsheng*; HU Baoye

    New particle formation (NPF) has a great impact on regional and global climate, air quality and human health. This study uses a Scanning Mobility Particle Sizer (SMPS) for simultaneous measurement of particle number size distribution (PNSD) in wintertime to investigate NPF in the coastal city of Xiamen. The mean particle number concentration, surface area concentration and volume concentration were 7.25 × 103 cm-3, 152.54 μm2 cm-3, and 4.03 μm3 cm-3, respectively. Particle number concentration was mainly influenced by the nucleation mode and the Aitken mode, whereas the main contributor to particle surface area concentration and volume concentration was accumulation mode particles. The frequency of NPF events occurred was around 41.4% in December 2019. The typical growth rates of new formed particles were 1.41–2.54 nm h-1, and the observed formation rates were 0.49–1.43 cm-3 s-1. A comparative analysis of conditions between event and non-event days was performed. The results emphasized that air temperature, UV radiation and relative humidity were the most decisive meteorological factors, and NPF events usually occurred under clean atmospheric conditions with low PM concentrations. Although condensation sink was high when NPF event occurred, the level of SO2 and O3 concentration was also high.

    Key words:Particle size distribution;New particle formation;Formation rate;Growth rate;Meteorological conditions

    Volume:826

    Page:154208

    Journal:SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT

    https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.154208

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