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Tunable diode laser measurements of formaldehyde during the TOPSE 2000 study: Distributions, trends, and model comparisons

Authors :
Richard E. Shetter
J. Snow
M. T. Coffey
Donald R. Blake
Nicola J. Blake
Bob Talbot
Brian G. Heikes
Dieter H. Ehhalt
Yuhang Wang
Christopher A. Cantrell
Alan Fried
Barry Lefer
James W. Hannigan
Elliot Atlas
Jack E. Dibb
Brian A. Ridley
Oliver W. Wingenter
Eric Scheuer
Bryan P. Wert
Simone Meinardi
James Walega
Source :
Scopus-Elsevier, Journal of Geophysical Research 108, TOP 13-1-TOP 13-2 (2003). doi:10.1029/2002JD002208
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
American Geophysical Union (AGU), 2003.

Abstract

[1] Airborne measurements of formaldehyde (CH2O) were acquired employing tunable diode laser absorption spectroscopy (TDLAS) during the 2000 Tropospheric Ozone Production About the Spring Equinox (TOPSE) study. This study consisted of seven deployments spanning the time period from 4 February to 23 May 2000 and covered a wide latitudinal band from 40degreesN to 85degreesN. The median measured CH2O concentrations, with a few exceptions, did not show any clear temporal trends from February to May in each of five altitude and three latitude bins examined. Detailed measurement-model comparisons were carried out using a variety of approaches employing two different steady state models. Because recent emissions of CH2O and/or its precursors often result in model underpredictions, background conditions were identified using a number of chemical tracers. For background conditions at temperatures warmer than -45degreesC, the measurement-model agreement on average ranged between -13% and +5% (measurement-model/measurement), which corresponded to mean and median (measurement-model) differences of 3 +/- 69 and -6 parts per trillion by volume (pptv), respectively. At very low temperatures starting at around -45degreesC, significant and persistent (measurement-model) differences were observed from February to early April from southern Canada to the Arctic Ocean in the 6-8 km altitude range. In such cases, measured CH2O was as much as 392 pptv higher than modeled, and the median difference was 132 pptv (83%). Low light conditions as well as cold temperatures may be important in this effect. A number of possible mechanisms involving the reaction of CH3O2 with HO2 to produce CH2O directly were investigated, but in each case the discrepancy was only minimally reduced. Other possibilities were also considered but in each case there was no compelling evidence to support any of the hypotheses. Whatever the cause, the elevated CH2O concentrations significantly impact upper tropospheric HOx levels at high latitudes (>57degreesN) in the February-April time frame.

Details

ISSN :
01480227
Volume :
108
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Geophysical Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5584c721050195fd1dbec0a2dcb8c9ba
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2002jd002208