Li Xiaodong
School
School of Earth System Science
Professional Title
Professor
Administrative Appointments
Assistant dean
Discipline
环境地球化学
Contact Information
022-87370975
022-27405051
xiaodong.li@tju.edu.cn
Building #16, Tianjing University, 92# Weijing Road, Nakai District, Tianjin
300072
Brief Introduction
The main work are as follows: biogeochemical cycle of carbon, nitrogen and sulfur in the catchment and its eco-environmental effects; sources, migration and transformation of inorganic sulfur and nitrogen in the air, water, and soil environment by multi isotopic tracing.
Education Background
- Doctoral degree| Osaka City University| Environmental Geochemistry | 2006
- Master’s Degree| Sichuan University| Environmental Engineering | 1998
- Bachelor’s Degree| Northeast Normal University| Environmental Science | 1995
Research Interests
- Biogeochemicalcycle of nutrient elements (N, P, Si) within cascade reservoirs.
- Isotopic tracing study on the sources, transformation, andtransport processes of urban aerosol.
Courses
Positions & Employments
-
2016.1-Now
 School of Earth System Science, Tianjin University | Assistant dean | Professor  -
2006.7-2015.12
State Key Laboratory of environmental geochemistry | Institute of geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences | Professor  -
1998.7-2006.6
College of environment and civil engineering | Chengdu University of Technology | Lecturer 
Academic Achievements
- Papers
- [1] Diurnal and seasonal variations in water-soluble inorganic ions and nitrate dual isotopes of PM2.5: Implications for source apportionment and formation processes of urban aerosol nitrate
- [2] Assessing the oxidative weathering of pyrite and its role in controlling atmospheric CO2 release in the eastern Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
-
- [3] Damming effects on dissolved inorganic carbon in different kinds of reservoirs in Jialing River, Southwest China
- [4] Chemical Characteristics of Major Inorganic Ions in PM2.5 Based on Year-Long Observations in Guiyang, Southwest China—Implications for Formation Pathways and the Influences of Regional Transport
- [5] Impact of Coal Replacing Project on atmospheric fine aerosol nitrate loading and formation pathways in urban Tianjin: Insights from chemical composition and N-15 and O-18 isotope ratios
- [6] Insight into the mechanisms of denitrification and sulfate reduction coexistence in cascade reservoirs of the Jialing River: Evidence from a multi-isotope approach
- [7] Aerosol pollution in a megacity of southwest China inferred from variation characteristics of sulfate-delta S-34 and water-soluble inorganic compositions in TSP
- [8] Cumulative effects of cascade dams on river water cycle: Evidence from hydrogen and oxygen isotopes
- [9] Large contribution of fine carbonaceous aerosols from municipal waste burning inferred from distributions of diacids and fatty acids
- [10] Seasonal Characteristics of Sulfate and Nitrate in Size-segregated Particles in Ammonia-poor and -rich Atmospheres in Chengdu, Southwest China
- [11] Nitrate dynamics during impoundment and flood periods in a subtropical karst reservoir: Hongfeng Lake, Southwestern China
- [12] Geochemistry of the dissolved loads of the Liao River basin in northeast China under anthropogenic pressure: Chemical weathering and controlling factors
- [13] Damming effects on river sulfur cycle in karst area: A case study of the Wujiang cascade reservoirs
- [14] The geochemical behavior of Mg isotopes in the Huanghe basin, China
- [15] Atmospheric lead in urban Guiyang, Southwest China: Isotopic source signatures
- [16] Using dual isotopic data to track the sources and behaviors of dissolved sulfate in the western North China Plain
- [17] Stable sulfur isotope ratios and water-soluble inorganic compositions of PM10 in Yichang City, central China
- [18] High abundances of dicarboxylic acids, oxocarboxylic acids, and alpha-dicarbonyls in fine aerosols (PM2.5) in Chengdu, China during wintertime haze pollution
- [19] The O and H isotope characteristics of water from major rivers in China
- [20] Sources and Processes Affecting Nitrate in a Dam-Controlled Subtropical River, Southwest China
- [21] Ammonium first: natural mosses prefer atmospheric ammonium but vary utilization of dissolved organic nitrogen depending on habitat and nitrogen deposition
- [22] Chemical weathering under mid- to cool temperate and monsoon-controlled climate: A study on water geochemistry of the Songhuajiang River system, northeast China
- [23] Pitfalls and New Mechanisms in Moss Isotope Biomonitoring of Atmospheric Nitrogen Deposition
- [24] Identification of dissolved sulfate sources and the role of sulfuric acid in carbonate weathering using dual-isotopic data from the Jialing River, Southwest China
- [25] The use of environmental isotopic (C, Sr, S) and hydrochemical tracers to characterize anthropogenic effects on karst groundwater quality: A case study of the Shuicheng Basin, SW China
- [26] Chemical and isotopic compositions of the Minjiang River, a headwater tributary of the Yangtze River