Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5753005 | Atmospheric Environment | 2017 | 28 Pages |
Abstract
We present a national-scale model analysis on the sources and processes of inorganic nitrogen deposition over China using the GEOS-Chem model at 1/2° Ã 1/3° horizontal resolution. Model results for 2008-2012 are evaluated with an ensemble of surface measurements of wet deposition flux and gaseous ammonia (NH3) concentration, and satellite measurements of tropospheric NO2 columns. Annual total inorganic nitrogen deposition fluxes are simulated to be generally less than 10 kg N haâ1 aâ1 in western China (less than 2 kg N haâ1 aâ1 over Tibet), 15-50 kg N haâ1 aâ1 in eastern China, and 16.4 kg N haâ1 aâ1 averaged over China. Annual total deposition to China is 16.4 Tg N, with 10.2 Tg N (62%) from reduced nitrogen (NHx) and 6.2 Tg N from oxidized nitrogen (NOy). Domestic anthropogenic sources contribute 86% of the total deposition; foreign anthropogenic sources 7% and natural sources 7%. Annually 23% of domestically emitted NH3 and 36% for NOx are exported outside the terrestrial land of China. We find that atmospheric nitrogen deposition is about half of the nitrogen input from fertilizer application (29.6 Tg N aâ1), and is much higher than that from natural biological fixation (7.3 Tg N aâ1) over China. A comparison of nitrogen deposition with critical load estimates for eutrophication indicates that about 15% of the land over China experiences critical load exceedances, demonstrating the necessity of nitrogen emission controls to avoid potential negative ecological effects.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Atmospheric Science
Authors
Yuanhong Zhao, Lin Zhang, Youfan Chen, Xuejun Liu, Wen Xu, Yuepeng Pan, Lei Duan,