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Name: Renjian Zhang
Degree: Ph.D
Title: Professor
Address: Key Lab. of Climate-Environment for Temperate East Asia,
Institute of Atmospheric Physics(IAP)
Chinese Academy of Sciences(CAS)
Qijiahuozi Huayanli 40#,
P.O.Box 9804, Beijing 100029,China
Phone: 86-10-62064089
Fax: 86-10-62028604
E-mail: zrj@mail.iap.ac.cn   zrj@tea.ac.cn

Brief Experences

Education
Ph.D., 1997, Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
B.S., 1988, Department of Atmospheric Sciences, Nanjing University

Experience
2004.01-Present Professor in Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
2004.06-2004.08 Associate professor in the Hong Kong Polytechnic University
1999.04-2003.12 Associate professor in Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences
1988.07-1999.03 Assistant professor in Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Professional Societies
Vice President of Chinese Society of Particuology(CSP)
Secretary-general, Institute of Aerosol Science and Technology(IAST),CSP
Speaker of ”¶Atmospheric Chemistry”·for Graduate School of Chinese Academy of Sciences

Research interests

Source apportionment of urban aerosols
Origin, properties, and evolution of Dust storm
Atmospheric chemistry
Global environmental change

Ongoing Projects

National Basic Science Research Project"Aridization in Northern China and Human adaption"(2006-2010)
National Science Foundation of China Project "High-resolution observations of chemical components of urban inhalable particles and source apportionment" (2006-2008).

Publications

  1. 1. Zhang R.J. et al., 2009, Organic carbon and elemental carbon associated with PM10 in Beijing during spring time, Journal of Hazardous Materials (in press)
    2. Zhang R.J. et al., 2009, The elemental composition of atmospheric particles at Beijing during Asian dust events in spring 2004, Aerosol and Air Quality Research (in press)
    3. Zhang R.J. et al., 2009, Atmospheric Pb levels over mountain Qomolangma region, Particuology, 7(3),211-214.
    4. Zhang R.J. et al., 2009, Chemical properties and origin of dust aerosols in Beijing during springtime, Particuology, 7(1), 61-67.
    5. Zhang R.J. et al., 2008, Characteristic of chemical composition of PM2.5 in Tongyu, semi-arid region in Northeast China in spring period, Adv.Atmos.Sci., 25(6), 922-931.
    6. Zhang R.J. et al., 2008, Continuous measurement of number concentrations and elemental composition of aerosol particles for a dust storm event in Beijing, Adv. Atmos.Sci, 25(1):89-95.
    7. Zhang R.J. et al., 2008, Study of elemental mass size distributions of aerosol in Lijiang, a background site in Southwest China, Aerosol and Air Quality Research, 8(3):339-347.
    8. Zhang R.J. et al., 2007, Carbonaceous aerosols in PM10 and pollution gases in winter in Beijing, J.Environ. Sci.,19(5):564-571.
    9. Zhang R.J. et al., 2006, Physicochemical characterization and origin of the 20 March 2002 heavy dust storm in Beijing, Aerosol and Air Quality Research, 6(3),268-280.
    10. Zhang R.J. et al., 2005, Ground observations of a strong dust storm in Beijing in March 2002, J.Geophys.Res., 110(D18S06), doi:10.1029/2004JD004589.
    11. Zhang R.J. et al., 2004, A comparison analysis of chemical composition of particles between dust period and non dust periods in Beijing, Adv. Atmos.Sci., 21(2), 300-305.
    12. Zhang R.J. et al., 2004, Seasonal characterization of dust days, mass concentration and dry deposition of atmospheric aerosols over Qingdao, China, China Particuology, 2(5), 196-199.
    13. Zhang R.J. et al., 2003, Inorganic chemical composition and source signature of PM2.5 in Beijing during ACE-Asia period, Chinese Science Bulletin, 48(10),1002-1005.
    14. Zhang R.J. et al., 2003,Analysis on the chemical and physical properties of particles in a dust storm in spring in Beijing, Powder Technology, 137(1),77-82.
    15. Zhang R.J. et al., 2002, Chemical composition of aerosols in winter/spring in Beijing, Journal of Environmental Sciences, 14(1), 7-11.
    16. Zhang R.J. et al., 2001, Preliminary research on the size distribution of aerosols in Beijing, Adv. Atmos.Sci., 18(2),225-230.
    17. Zhang R.J. et al., 2001, Long-term trends of carbon monoxide inferred using a 2-d Model, Chemosphere-Global Change Science, 3(2),123-132.
    18. Zhang R.J. et al., 2001, Numerical simulation of atmospheric methane trends over the last 150 Years, ACTA. Meteor. Sinaca, 15(1), 12-20.
    19. Zhang R.J. et al., 2000, Global two-dimensional chemical model and its simulation of composition of atmosphere, Adv. Atmos.Sci., 17(1), 72-82.
    20. Zhang R.J. et al., 1999, Modeling the sudden decrease in CH4 growth rate in 1992, Adv. Atmos.Sci., 16(2), 242-250.
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Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100029, People's Republic of China
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