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An elevated reservoir of air pollutants over the Mid-Atlantic States during the 2011 DISCOVER-AQ campaign: Airborne measurements and numerical simulations

Authors :
Kenneth E. Pickering
Douglas K. Martins
Melanie Follette-Cook
Hao He
Maria Tzortziou
Russell R. Dickerson
Andrew J. Weinheimer
Glenn S. Diskin
James H. Crawford
Pius Lee
Jennifer C. Hains
Jeffrey W. Stehr
Bruce E. Anderson
Christopher P. Loughner
H. L. Arkinson
Anne M. Thompson
L. C. Brent
Source :
Atmospheric Environment. 85:18-30
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2014.

Abstract

During a classic heat wave with record high temperatures and poor air quality from July 18 to 23, 2011, an elevated reservoir of air pollutants was observed over and downwind of Baltimore, MD, with relatively clean conditions near the surface. Aircraft and ozonesonde measurements detected approximately 120 parts per billion by volume ozone at 800 meters altitude, but approximately 80 parts per billion by volume ozone near the surface. High concentrations of other pollutants were also observed around the ozone peak: approximately 300 parts per billion by volume CO at 1200 meters, approximately 2 parts per billion by volume NO2 at 800 meters, approximately 5 parts per billion by volume SO2 at 600 meters, and strong aerosol optical scattering (2 x 10 (sup 4) per meter) at 600 meters. These results suggest that the elevated reservoir is a mixture of automobile exhaust (high concentrations of O3, CO, and NO2) and power plant emissions (high SO2 and aerosols). Back trajectory calculations show a local stagnation event before the formation of this elevated reservoir. Forward trajectories suggest an influence on downwind air quality, supported by surface ozone observations on the next day over the downwind PA, NJ and NY area. Meteorological observations from aircraft and ozonesondes show a dramatic veering of wind direction from south to north within the lowest 5000 meters, implying that the development of the elevated reservoir was caused in part by the Chesapeake Bay breeze. Based on in situ observations, Community Air Quality Multi-scale Model (CMAQ) forecast simulations with 12 kilometers resolution overestimated surface ozone concentrations and failed to predict this elevated reservoir; however, CMAQ research simulations with 4 kilometers and 1.33 kilometers resolution more successfully reproduced this event. These results show that high resolution is essential for resolving coastal effects and predicting air quality for cities near major bodies of water such as Baltimore on the Chesapeake Bay and downwind areas in the Northeast.

Details

ISSN :
13522310
Volume :
85
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Atmospheric Environment
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........5d3e64c359a623c626373ee088679b30
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.atmosenv.2013.11.039