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DOI10.5194/acp-17-11107-2017
Semivolatile POA and parameterized total combustion SOA in CMAQv5.2: impacts on source strength and partitioning
Murphy, Benjamin N.1; Woody, Matthew C.1; Jimenez, Jose L.2,3; Carlton, Ann Marie G.4; Hayes, Patrick L.5; Liu, Shang6; Ng, Nga L.7,8; Russell, Lynn M.9; Setyan, Ari10; Xu, Lu7; Young, Jeff1; Zaveri, Rahul A.11; Zhang, Qi12; Pye, Havala O. T.1
发表日期2017-09-20
ISSN1680-7316
卷号17期号:18页码:11107-11133
英文摘要

Mounting evidence from field and laboratory observations coupled with atmospheric model analyses shows that primary combustion emissions of organic compounds dynamically partition between the vapor and particulate phases, especially as near-source emissions dilute and cool to ambient conditions. The most recent version of the Community Multiscale Air Quality model version 5.2 (CMAQv5.2) accounts for the semivolatile partitioning and gas-phase aging of these primary organic aerosol (POA) compounds consistent with experimentally derived parameterizations. We also include a new surrogate species, potential secondary organic aerosol from combustion emissions (pcSOA), which provides a representation of the secondary organic aerosol (SOA) from anthropogenic combustion sources that could be missing from current chemical transport model predictions. The reasons for this missing mass likely include the following: (1) unspeciated semivolatile and intermediate volatility organic compound (SVOC and IVOC, respectively) emissions missing from current inventories, (2) multigenerational aging of organic vapor products from known SOA precur-sors (e.g., toluene, alkanes), (3) underestimation of SOA yields due to vapor wall losses in smog chamber experiments, and (4) reversible organic compounds-water interactions and/or aqueous-phase processing of known organic vapor emissions. CMAQ predicts the spatially averaged contribution of pcSOA to OA surface concentrations in the continental United States to be 38.6 and 23.6% in the 2011 winter and summer, respectively.


Whereas many past modeling studies focused on a particular measurement campaign, season, location, or model configuration, we endeavor to evaluate the model and important uncertain parameters with a comprehensive set of United States-based model runs using multiple horizontal scales (4 and 12 km), gas-phase chemical mechanisms, and seasons and years. The model with representation of semivolatile POA improves predictions of hourly OA observations over the traditional nonvolatile model at sites during field campaigns in southern California (CalNex, May-June 2010), northern California (CARES, June 2010), the southeast US (SOAS, June 2013; SEARCH, January and July, 2011). Model improvements manifest better correlations (e.g., the correlation coefficient at Pasadena at night increases from 0.38 to 0.62) and reductions in underprediction during the photochemically active afternoon period (e.g., bias at Pasadena from -5.62 to -2.42 mu gm(-3)). Daily averaged predictions of observations at routine-monitoring networks from simulations over the continental US (CONUS) in 2011 show modest improvement during winter, with mean biases reducing from 1.14 to 0.73 mu gm(-3), but less change in the summer when the decreases from POA evaporation were similar to the magnitude of added SOA mass. Because the model-performance improvement realized by including the relatively simple pcSOA approach is similar to that of more-complicated parameterizations of OA formation and aging, we recommend caution when applying these more-complicated approaches as they currently rely on numerous uncertain parameters.


The pcSOA parameters optimized for performance at the southern and northern California sites lead to higher OA formation than is observed in the CONUS evaluation. This may be due to any of the following: variations in real pcSOA in different regions or time periods, too-high concentrations of other OA sources in the model that are important over the larger domain, or other model issues such as loss processes. This discrepancy is likely regionally and temporally dependent and driven by interferences from factors like varying emissions and chemical regimes.


语种英语
WOS记录号WOS:000411253700002
来源期刊ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS
来源机构美国环保署
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/61872
作者单位1.US EPA, Natl Exposure Res Lab, Res Triangle Pk, NC 27711 USA;
2.Univ Colorado, Cooperat Inst Res Environm Sci, Boulder, CO 80309 USA;
3.Univ Colorado, Dept Chem & Biochem, Campus Box 215, Boulder, CO 80309 USA;
4.Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Chem, Irvine, CA 92697 USA;
5.Univ Montreal, Dept Chem, Montreal, PQ, Canada;
6.Univ Sci & Technol China, Sch Earth & Space Sci, Hefei, Anhui, Peoples R China;
7.Georgia Inst Technol, Sch Chem & Biomol Engn, Atlanta, GA 30332 USA;
8.Georgia Inst Technol, Sch Earth & Atmospher Sci, Atlanta, GA 30332 USA;
9.Univ Calif San Diego, Scripps Inst Oceanog, La Jolla, CA 92093 USA;
10.EMPA, Swiss Fed Labs Mat Sci & Technol, CH-8600 Dubendorf, Switzerland;
11.Pacific Northwest Natl Lab, Atmospher Sci & Global Change Div, Richland, WA USA;
12.Univ Calif Davis, Dept Environm Toxicol, Davis, CA 95616 USA
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Murphy, Benjamin N.,Woody, Matthew C.,Jimenez, Jose L.,et al. Semivolatile POA and parameterized total combustion SOA in CMAQv5.2: impacts on source strength and partitioning[J]. 美国环保署,2017,17(18):11107-11133.
APA Murphy, Benjamin N..,Woody, Matthew C..,Jimenez, Jose L..,Carlton, Ann Marie G..,Hayes, Patrick L..,...&Pye, Havala O. T..(2017).Semivolatile POA and parameterized total combustion SOA in CMAQv5.2: impacts on source strength and partitioning.ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS,17(18),11107-11133.
MLA Murphy, Benjamin N.,et al."Semivolatile POA and parameterized total combustion SOA in CMAQv5.2: impacts on source strength and partitioning".ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS 17.18(2017):11107-11133.
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