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Can sprinklers rinse away the haze?

By Eliana Kirshenblat in New York | China Daily | Updated: 2014-02-16 08:35

Can sprinklers rinse away the haze?

Yu Shaocai proposes installing a sprinkler system to water the atmosphere, essentially rinsing the smog away. He was Inspired by the scene of a garden being watered. [Photo by Sun Xinming / for China Daily]

Can sprinklers rinse away the haze?

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Can sprinklers rinse away the haze?

Clearing the air

Yu Shaocai believes he knows how to clean China's dirty air - wash it.

The academic at China's Zhejiang University and the US' North Carolina State University recently detailed his idea in Springer's journal Environmental Chemistry Letters. He proposes installing a sprinkler system to water China's atmosphere, essentially rinsing the smog away.

Yu's research suggests this could reduce the atmosphere's fine-particle load to 35 micrograms per cubic meter.

He says the idea came to him while watching a garden being watered.

"I immediately thought that we can clean air pollution by spraying water into the atmosphere - like watering a garden".

China's haze is caused by PM2.5 - particles smaller than 2.5 microns in diameter that the respiratory system can't filter out.

"It's well-known that precipitation scavenging is the single most efficient way of removing aerosol pollution in the atmosphere," he says.

Precipitation scavenging is the natural process by which atmospheric moisture - rain, fog or snow - removes substances from the air.

Yu cites research done at a Beijing urban atmospheric environmental monitoring station that shows a marked decrease in air pollution directly after heavy rainfalls - and increases in pollutants during dry spells.

"When we have rain, especially heavy rain, rainwater can clean the air pollution in a very short time period from a few minutes to hours or days, depending on the precipitation rates," Yu writes.

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