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Effect of petrochemical industrial emissions of reactive alkenes and NOxon tropospheric ozone formation in Houston, Texas

Authors :
William C. Kuster
Bryan P. Wert
Elliot Atlas
Donna Sueper
Charles A. Brock
Raul J. Alvarez
Andrew J. Weinheimer
Sue M. Schauffler
R. Jakoubek
S. G. Donnelly
John S. Holloway
Michael Trainer
James M. Roberts
R. W. Dissly
Lisa S. Darby
V. Stroud
Wayne M. Angevine
Gregory J. Frost
Gerhard Hübler
Paul D. Goldan
Christine Wiedinmyer
Christoph J. Senff
Robert M. Banta
David D. Parrish
D. Nicks
J. A. Neuman
William T. Potter
Fred C. Fehsenfeld
Alan Fried
Frank Flocke
T. B. Ryerson
Source :
Journal of Geophysical Research. 108
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
American Geophysical Union (AGU), 2003.

Abstract

[1] Petrochemical industrial facilities can emit large amounts of highly reactive hydrocarbons and NOx to the atmosphere; in the summertime, such colocated emissions are shown to consistently result in rapid and efficient ozone (O3) formation downwind. Airborne measurements show initial hydrocarbon reactivity in petrochemical source plumes in the Houston, TX, metropolitan area is primarily due to routine emissions of the alkenes propene and ethene. Reported emissions of these highly reactive compounds are substantially lower than emissions inferred from measurements in the plumes from these sources. Net O3 formation rates and yields per NOx molecule oxidized in these petrochemical industrial source plumes are substantially higher than rates and yields observed in urban or rural power plant plumes. These observations suggest that reductions in reactive alkene emissions from petrochemical industrial sources are required to effectively address the most extreme O3 exceedences in the Houston metropolitan area.

Details

ISSN :
01480227
Volume :
108
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Geophysical Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........aae3fdbf10177b89d983d56b6c456b83
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2002jd003070