Ozone and NOx chemistry in the eastern US: evaluation of CMAQ/CB05 with satellite (OMI) data

被引:78
作者
Canty, T. P. [1 ]
Hembeck, L. [1 ]
Vinciguerra, T. P. [1 ]
Anderson, D. C. [1 ]
Goldberg, D. L. [1 ]
Carpenter, S. F. [1 ]
Allen, D. J. [1 ]
Loughner, C. P. [2 ,3 ]
Salawitch, R. J. [1 ,2 ,4 ]
Dickerson, R. R. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Maryland, Dept Atmospher & Ocean Sci, College Pk, MD 20742 USA
[2] Univ Maryland, Earth Syst Sci Interdisciplinary Ctr, College Pk, MD 20742 USA
[3] NASA, Goddard Space Flight Ctr, Greenbelt, MD 20771 USA
[4] Univ Maryland, Dept Chem & Biochem, College Pk, MD 20742 USA
关键词
AIR-QUALITY; TROPOSPHERIC NO2; DISCOVER-AQ; ALKYL NITRATES; UNITED-STATES; ISOPRENE PHOTOOXIDATION; ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY; EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS; RETRIEVAL ALGORITHM; POLLUTANT TRANSPORT;
D O I
10.5194/acp-15-10965-2015
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Regulatory air quality models, such as the Community Multiscale Air Quality model (CMAQ), are used by federal and state agencies to guide policy decisions that determine how to best achieve adherence with National Ambient Air Quality Standards for surface ozone. We use observations of ozone and its important precursor NO2 to test the representation of the photochemistry and emission of ozone precursors within CMAQ. Observations of tropospheric column NO2 from the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI), retrieved by two independent groups, show that the model overestimates urban NO2 and underestimates rural NO2 under all conditions examined for July and August 2011 in the US Northeast. The overestimate of the urban to rural ratio of tropospheric column NO2 for this baseline run of CMAQ (CB05 mechanism, mobile NOx emissions from the National Emissions Inventory; isoprene emissions from MEGAN v2.04) suggests this model may underestimate the importance of interstate transport of NOx. This CMAQ simulation leads to a considerable overestimate of the 2-month average of 8 h daily maximum surface ozone in the US Northeast, as well as an overestimate of 8 h ozone at AQS sites during days when the state of Maryland experienced NAAQS exceedances. We have implemented three changes within CMAQ motivated by OMI NO2 as well as aircraft observations obtained in July 2011 during the NASA DISCOVER-AQ campaign: (a) the modeled lifetime of organic nitrates within CB05 has been reduced by a factor of 10, (b) emissions of NOx from mobile sources has been reduced by a factor of 2, and (c) isoprene emissions have been reduced by using MEGAN v2.10 rather than v2.04. Compared to the baseline simulation, the CMAQ run using all three of these changes leads to considerably better simulation of column NO2 in both urban and rural areas, better agreement with the 2-month average of daily 8 h maximum ozone in the US Northeast, fewer number of false positives of an ozone exceedance throughout the domain, as well as an unbiased simulation of surface ozone at ground-based AQS sites in Maryland that experienced an ozone exceedance during July and August 2007. These modifications to CMAQ may provide a framework for use in studies focused on achieving future adherence to specific air quality standards for surface ozone by reducing emission of NOx from various anthropogenic sectors.
引用
收藏
页码:10965 / 10982
页数:18
相关论文
共 81 条
[71]  
USEPA (United States Environmental Protection Agency), 2005, EPA420B09015 NMIM
[72]   Multi-model ensemble simulations of tropospheric NO2 compared with GOME retrievals for the year 2000 [J].
van Noije, T. P. C. ;
Eskes, H. J. ;
Dentener, F. J. ;
Stevenson, D. S. ;
Ellingsen, K. ;
Schultz, M. G. ;
Wild, O. ;
Amann, M. ;
Atherton, C. S. ;
Bergmann, D. J. ;
Bey, I. ;
Boersma, K. F. ;
Butler, T. ;
Cofala, J. ;
Drevet, J. ;
Fiore, A. M. ;
Gauss, M. ;
Hauglustaine, D. A. ;
Horowitz, L. W. ;
Isaksen, I. S. A. ;
Krol, M. C. ;
Lamarque, J. -F. ;
Lawrence, M. G. ;
Martin, R. V. ;
Montanaro, V. ;
Mueller, J. - F. ;
Pitari, G. ;
Prather, M. J. ;
Pyle, J. A. ;
Richter, A. ;
Rodriguez, J. M. ;
Savage, N. H. ;
Strahan, S. E. ;
Sudo, K. ;
Szopa, S. ;
van Roozendael, M. .
ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2006, 6 :2943-2979
[73]   Constraints on ship NOx emissions in Europe using GEOS-Chem and OMI satellite NO2 observations [J].
Vinken, G. C. M. ;
Boersma, K. F. ;
van Donkelaar, A. ;
Zhang, L. .
ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2014, 14 (03) :1353-1369
[74]   Data mining to characterize ozone behavior in Baltimore and Washington, DC [J].
Walsh, Kenneth J. ;
Milligan, Matthew ;
Woodman, Michael ;
Sherwell, John .
ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 2008, 42 (18) :4280-4292
[75]   Have primary emission reduction measures reduced ozone across Europe? An analysis of European rural background ozone trends 1996-2005 [J].
Wilson, R. C. ;
Fleming, Z. L. ;
Monks, P. S. ;
Clain, G. ;
Henne, S. ;
Konovalov, I. B. ;
Szopa, S. ;
Menut, L. .
ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2012, 12 (01) :437-454
[76]   Understanding the impact of recent advances in isoprene photooxidation on simulations of regional air quality [J].
Xie, Y. ;
Paulot, F. ;
Carter, W. P. L. ;
Nolte, C. G. ;
Luecken, D. J. ;
Hutzell, W. T. ;
Wennberg, P. O. ;
Cohen, R. C. ;
Pinder, R. W. .
ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2013, 13 (16) :8439-8455
[77]  
Yarwood G., 2005, UPDATES CARBON BOND
[78]   Characterization of an eastern US severe air pollution episode using WRF/Chem [J].
Yegorova, E. A. ;
Allen, D. J. ;
Loughner, C. P. ;
Pickering, K. E. ;
Dickerson, R. R. .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2011, 116
[79]   Eta-CMAQ air quality forecasts for O3 and related species using three different photochemical mechanisms (CB4, CB05, SAPRC-99): comparisons with measurements during the 2004 ICARTT study [J].
Yu, S. ;
Mathur, R. ;
Sarwar, G. ;
Kang, D. ;
Tong, D. ;
Pouliot, G. ;
Pleim, J. .
ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2010, 10 (06) :3001-3025
[80]   Comparative evaluation of the impact of WRF-NMM and WRF-ARW meteorology on CMAQ simulations for O3 and related species during the 2006 TexAQS/GoMACCS campaign [J].
Yu, Shaocai ;
Mathur, Rohit ;
Pleim, Jonathan ;
Pouliot, George ;
Wong, David ;
Eder, Brian ;
Schere, Kenneth ;
Gilliam, Rob ;
Rao, S. Trivikrama .
ATMOSPHERIC POLLUTION RESEARCH, 2012, 3 (02) :149-162