Significant contributions of combustion-related sources to ammonia emissions.

Nature communications(2022)

Cited 33|Views40
No score
Abstract
Atmospheric ammonia (NH) and ammonium (NH) can substantially influence air quality, ecosystems, and climate. NH volatilization from fertilizers and wastes (v-NH) has long been assumed to be the primary NH source, but the contribution of combustion-related NH (c-NH, mainly fossil fuels and biomass burning) remains unconstrained. Here, we collated nitrogen isotopes of atmospheric NH and NH and established a robust method to differentiate v-NH and c-NH. We found that the relative contribution of the c-NH in the total NH emissions reached up to 40 ± 21% (6.6 ± 3.4 Tg N yr), 49 ± 16% (2.8 ± 0.9 Tg N yr), and 44 ± 19% (2.8 ± 1.3 Tg N yr) in East Asia, North America, and Europe, respectively, though its fractions and amounts in these regions generally decreased over the past decades. Given its importance, c-NH emission should be considered in making emission inventories, dispersion modeling, mitigation strategies, budgeting deposition fluxes, and evaluating the ecological effects of atmospheric NH loading.
More
Translated text
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined