摘要

A regional air quality model system (RAQMS) was developed by coupling the treatment of heterogeneous reactions between sea salt aerosols (SSAs) and trace gases and applied to the investigation of aerosol properties and evolutionary features in the western Pacific Ocean in the spring of 2014. Model results for meteorological variables, PM concentrations, and size-resolved water soluble inorganic aerosol (WSIA) concentrations were compared and analyzed with a variety of observations from in situ measurements and the research cruise Dongfanghong II. Model validation demonstrated that the model can simulate the spatial-temporal distribution and size distribution of aerosol inorganic components in the marine atmosphere over East Asia, and the inclusion of heterogeneous reactions on SSAs apparently improved the model simulation for WSIA concentration, especially for aerosol size distribution. In the western Pacific Ocean, the non-sea salt SO42- and NO3- formed on SSAs accounted for up to 30% and 90% of surface SO42- and NO3- concentrations on average, respectively. The atmospheric depositions of total inorganic sulfur and nitrogen were estimated to be 13184 x 10(3) kgS/d and 10728 x 10(3) kgN/d, respectively. Wet deposition was the dominant removal pathway, which accounted for 75% and 68% of sulfur and nitrogen depositions, respectively. The deposition of fine-mode SO42- exceeded that of coarse-mode SO42-, whereas the deposition of coarse-mode NO3- was comparable to that of fine-mode NO3-. The non-sea salt SO42- and NO3- formed on SSAs contributed 16% and 9% of total sulfur and nitrogen depositions on average, respectively. The above results revealed the important role of SSAs in both atmospheric chemistry and deposition in the western Pacific Ocean.