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A single-point modeling approach for the intercomparison and evaluation of ozone dry deposition across chemical transport models (Activity 2 of AQMEII4).

Authors :
Clifton, Olivia Elaine
Schwede, Donna
Hogrefe, Christian
Bash, Jesse O.
Bland, Sam
Cheung, Philip
Coyle, Mhairi
Emberson, Lisa
Flemming, Johannes
Fredj, Erick
Galmarini, Stefano
Ganzeveld, Laurens
Gazetas, Orestis
Goded, Ignacio
Holmes, Christopher D.
Horváth, László
Huijnen, Vincent
Li, Qian
Makar, Paul A.
Mammarella, Ivan
Source :
EGUsphere; 3/22/2023, p1-92, 92p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

A primary sink of air pollutants and their precursors is dry deposition. Dry deposition estimates differ across chemical transport models yet an understanding of the model spread is incomplete. Here we introduce Activity 2 of the Air Quality Model Evaluation International Initiative Phase 4 (AQMEII4). We examine dry deposition schemes from regional and global chemical transport models as well as standalone models used for impacts assessments or process understanding. We configure eighteen schemes as single-point models at eight northern hemisphere locations with observed ozone fluxes. Single-point models are driven by a common set of site-specific meteorological and environmental conditions. Five of eight sites have at least three years and up to twelve years of ozone fluxes. The spread across models that de-emphasizes outliers in multiyear mean ozone deposition velocities ranges from a factor of 1.2 to 1.9 annually across sites and tends to be highest during winter compared to summer. No model is within 50 % of observed multiyear averages across all sites and seasons, but some models perform well for some sites and seasons. For the first time, we demonstrate how contributions from depositional pathways vary across models. Models can disagree in relative contributions from the pathways, even when they predict similar deposition velocities, or agree in the relative contributions but predict different deposition velocities. Both stomatal and nonstomatal uptake contribute to the large model spread across sites. Our findings are the beginning of results from AQMEII4 Activity 2, which brings scientists who model air quality and dry deposition together with scientists who measure ozone fluxes to evaluate and improve dry deposition schemes in chemical transport models used for research, planning, and regulatory purposes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
EGUsphere
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
162583116
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-2023-465