Comparative evaluation of the impact of GRAPES and MM5 meteorology on CMAQ prediction over Pearl River Delta, China

被引:12
作者
Deng, Tao [1 ]
Chen, Yiang [1 ,2 ]
Wan, Qilin [1 ]
Zhang, Yanxia [1 ]
Deng, Xuejiao [1 ]
Huang, Yanyan [1 ]
Dai, Guangfeng [1 ]
Li, Fei [1 ]
机构
[1] China Meteorol Adm, Guangdong Prov Key Lab Reg Numer Weather Predict, Inst Trop & Marine Meteorol, Guangzhou 510080, Guangdong, Peoples R China
[2] Nanjing Univ Informat Sci & Technol, Collaborat Innovat Ctr Forecast & Evaluat Meteoro, Minist Educ,Joint Int Res Lab Climate & Environm, Key Lab Meteorol Disaster,Key Lab Aerosol Cloud P, Nanjing 210044, Jiangsu, Peoples R China
来源
PARTICUOLOGY | 2018年 / 40卷
基金
国家重点研发计划;
关键词
Air quality; Numerical simulation; Global/regional assimilation and prediction system (GRAPES); Community multiscale air quality (CMAQ); Process analysis; FINE PARTICULATE MATTER; AIR-QUALITY; SEASONAL TRENDS; EMISSIONS; REGION; SENSITIVITY; VISIBILITY; PM10; PARAMETERIZATION; POLLUTION;
D O I
10.1016/j.partic.2017.10.005
中图分类号
TQ [化学工业];
学科分类号
0817 ;
摘要
The community multiscale air quality (CMAQ) model was used to forecast air quality over the Pearl River Delta region from December 2013 to January 2014. The pollution forecasting performance of CMAQ coupled with two different meteorological models, i.e., the global regional assimilation and prediction system (GRAPES) and the fifth-generation mesoscale model (MM5), was assessed by comparison with observational data. The effects of meteorological factors and physicochemical processes on the forecast results were discussed through process analysis. The results showed that both models exhibited good performance but that of GRAPES-CMAQ was better. GRAPES was superior in predicting the overall variation tendencies of meteorological fields, but it showed large deviations in atmospheric pressure and wind speed. This contributed to the higher correlation coefficients of the pollutants with GRAPES-CMAQ but with greater deviations. The underestimations of nitrate and ammonium salt contributed to the underestimations of both particulate matter and extinction coefficients. Source emissions made the only positive contributions to surface layer SO2, CO, and NO. It was found that O-3 originated primarily from horizontal and vertical transport and that its consumption was predominantly via chemical processes. Conversely, NO2 was found derived primarily from chemical production. (C) 2018 Chinese Society of Particuology and Institute of Process Engineering, Chinese Academy of Sciences. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:88 / 97
页数:10
相关论文
共 14 条
  • [11] Impact Assessment of Energy Transition Policy on Air Quality over a Typical District of the Pearl River Delta Region, China
    Chen, Weidong
    Li, Haixian
    Zhu, Yun
    Jang, Jicheng
    Lin, Che-Jen
    Chiang, Pen-Chi
    Wang, Shuxiao
    Xing, Jia
    Fang, Tingting
    Li, Jie
    Yang, Qingshan
    Zheng, Kaiming
    AEROSOL AND AIR QUALITY RESEARCH, 2022, 22 (07)
  • [12] Evaluation of different control measures in 2014 to mitigate the impact of ship emissions on air quality in the Pearl River Delta, China
    Chen, Dongsheng
    Zhang, Ying
    Lang, Jianlei
    Zhou, Ying
    Li, Yue
    Guo, Xiurui
    Wang, Wenlin
    Liu, Bo
    ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 2019, 216
  • [13] Source impact and contribution analysis of ambient ozone using multi-modeling approaches over the Pearl River Delta region, China
    Fang, Tingting
    Zhu, Yun
    Wang, Shuxiao
    Xing, Jia
    Zhao, Bin
    Fan, Shaojia
    Li, Minhui
    Yang, Wenwei
    Chen, Ying
    Huang, Ruolin
    ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION, 2021, 289
  • [14] Spatiotemporal characterization of aerosols and trace gases over the Yangtze River Delta region, China: impact of trans-boundary pollution and meteorology
    Javed, Zeeshan
    Bilal, Muhammad
    Qiu, Zhongfeng
    Li, Guanlin
    Sandhu, Osama
    Mehmood, Khalid
    Wang, Yu
    Ali, Md. Arfan
    Liu, Cheng
    Wang, Yuhang
    Xue, Ruibin
    Du, Daolin
    Zheng, Xiaojun
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES EUROPE, 2022, 34 (01)