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Article Abstract

Ammonia (NH) has attracted increasing attention for its reduction potential in fine particulate matter mitigation, yet current NH emission inventories involve substantial uncertainties. Previous bottom-up NH inventories are usually constrained by satellite observations, deposition measurements, or isotopic analysis and still lack careful validation at fine regional scales. This study develops a novel diagnostic framework combining multisite NH observations across the Pearl River Delta (PRD) with the Community Multiscale Air Quality (CMAQ) model simulations and machine learning techniques to evaluate and refine a regional NH inventory. Our analysis indicates that the inventory overestimates agricultural emissions, particularly during the wet period, while underestimating nonagricultural sources. Underrepresented precipitation effects were a key driver of overestimated agricultural emissions (∼19% during the wet period). Conversely, a natural experiment during the Spring Festival holiday provided strong evidence that vehicle emissions are a key underestimated nonagricultural source. Adjusting the inventory based on these findings (agricultural sources reduced 39% (31%) during wet (dry) periods, nonagricultural sources increased 70%) improved NH(g) simulations across the PRD. Our study highlights the value of multisite observations in validating NH inventory and the critical need to better characterize underestimated (e.g., vehicles) and missing sources (e.g., urban landscaping) in current inventories.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.5c01380DOI Listing

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