Back to Search Start Over

Interactions of fire emissions and urban pollution over California: Ozone formation and air quality simulations

Authors :
Hanwant B. Singh
Andrew J. Weinheimer
C. Cai
Ajith Kaduwela
Armin Wisthaler
Source :
Atmospheric Environment. 56:45-51
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2012.

Abstract

An instrumented DC-8 aircraft was employed to perform airborne observations in rural and urban environs of California during the summer 2008 NASA ARCTAS-CARB campaign. The fortuitous occurrence of large wildfire episodes in Northern California allowed for studies of fire emissions, their composition, and their interactions with rural and urban air. Relative to CO, emissions of HCN were shown to vary non-linearly with fire characteristics while those of CH 3 CN were nearly unchanged, making the latter a superior quantitative tracer of biomass combustion. Although some fire plumes over California contained little NO x and virtually no O 3 enhancement, others contained ample VOCs and sufficient NO x , largely from urban influences, to result in significant ozone formation. The highest observed O 3 mixing ratios (170 ppb) were also in fire-influenced urban air masses. Attempts to simulate these interactions using CMAQ, a high-resolution state of the art air quality model, were only minimally successful and indicated several shortcomings in simulating fire emission influences on urban smog formation. A variety of secondary oxidation products (e.g. O 3 , PAN, HCHO) were substantially underestimated in fire-influenced air masses. Available data involving fire plumes and anthropogenic pollution interactions are presently quite sparse and additional observational and mechanistic studies are needed.

Details

ISSN :
13522310
Volume :
56
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Atmospheric Environment
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b380ce9904b5e6511bef7b7b39dc0a35
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.atmosenv.2012.03.046