Characteristics and Source Apportionment of Urban Air Pollution
A special issue of Atmosphere (ISSN 2073-4433). This special issue belongs to the section "Air Pollution Control".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 July 2024) | Viewed by 8219
Special Issue Editors
Interests: aerosol; new particle formation; cloud precipitation physics; aerosol-cloud interaction; aircraft observation
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: ozone; air pollution mechanism; atmospheric chemistry model; aerosol; new particle formation
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
As the symbol of modern civilization and social progress, cities are significant economic and social development centers. The problem of air pollution in urban regions, accompanied by the progression of urban resources, population and education, has received increasing attention in recent decades. The anthropogenic pollution emissions in urban areas are complex and concentrated, resulting in the development of compound pollution characteristics in urban air pollution. Therefore, clarifying the characteristics of urban air pollution and the sources of air pollutants is very important for us to control urban air pollution.
To fully understand the characteristics and source apportionment of urban air pollution, a large amount of monitoring data (ground, aircraft, and satellite) and multiple models (box, regional, and global) are required. This Special Issue aims to cover all theoretical, observational, experimental, and modeling studies that present new knowledge of air pollution in urban atmospheric environments.
Areas covered in our scope may include, but are not limited to, the following:
- Sources and formation mechanisms of air pollution in urban, including how pollutants are transformed or removed through transport, chemical reactions and photolysis and the rates of formation and conversion of air pollutants via atmospheric responses;
- The application of remote sensing monitoring technology in air pollution and ecology, including air pollution remote sensing, data-processing, phenomena and evolution of ecosystems and environments, classification and object analysis, etc.;
- Air pollution physical and chemical processes affecting climate and ecosystem, including aerosol pollution, biomass burning, dust, ozone, multiphase chemistry, etc.;
- Interaction mechanism between atmospheric physical processes and atmospheric pollutants, the interaction mechanism between atmospheric physical processes and transport, chemical transformation and removal of atmospheric pollutants, and the interaction of air pollutants with clouds and radiation.
Dr. Honglei Wang
Dr. Lijuan Shen
Dr. Xugeng Cheng
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- source apportionment
- air quality
- air pollution
- urban
- aerosol
- ozone
- black carbon
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