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Detailed comparisons of airborne formaldehyde measurements with box models during the 2006 INTEX-B and MILAGRO campaigns: potential evidence for significant impacts of unmeasured and multi-generation volatile organic carbon compounds

Authors :
G. W. Sachse
Brian G. Heikes
Petter Weibring
Daniel O'Sullivan
Daniel D. Riemer
Wolfgang Junkermann
Anne E. Perring
Samuel R. Hall
Dirk Richter
Eric C. Apel
Glenn S. Diskin
Rainer Volkamer
Simone Meinardi
Henry E. Fuelberg
James Walega
Jingqiu Mao
Andrew J. Weinheimer
D. J. Knapp
Xinrong Ren
Alan Fried
Jennifer R. Olson
J. W. Hair
James H. Crawford
William H. Brune
Hanwant B. Singh
Nicola J. Blake
Richard E. Shetter
Christopher A. Cantrell
Kirk Ullmann
Donald R. Blake
Ronald C. Cohen
L. G. Huey
R. Sinreich
Source :
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, Vol 11, Iss 22, Pp 11867-11894 (2011), Fried, A.; Cantrell, C.; Olson, J.; Crawford, J. H; Weibring, P.; Walega, J.; et al.(2011). Detailed comparisons of airborne formaldehyde measurements with box models during the 2006 INTEX-B and MILAGRO campaigns: potential evidence for significant impacts of unmeasured and multi-generation volatile organic carbon compounds. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 11(22), 11867-11894. doi: 10.5194/acp-11-11867-2011. UC Irvine: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/9pm5v6c4
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Copernicus Publications, 2011.

Abstract

Detailed comparisons of airborne CH2O measurements acquired by tunable diode laser absorption spectroscopy with steady state box model calculations were carried out using data from the 2006 INTEX-B and MILARGO campaign in order to improve our understanding of hydrocarbon oxidation processing. This study includes comparisons over Mexico (including Mexico City), the Gulf of Mexico, parts of the continental United States near the Gulf coast, as well as the more remote Pacific Ocean, and focuses on comparisons in the boundary layer. Select previous comparisons in other campaigns have highlighted some locations in the boundary layer where steady state box models have tended to underpredict CH2O, suggesting that standard steady state modeling assumptions might be unsuitable under these conditions, and pointing to a possible role for unmeasured hydrocarbons and/or additional primary emission sources of CH2O. Employing an improved instrument, more detailed measurement-model comparisons with better temporal overlap, up-to-date measurement and model precision estimates, up-to-date rate constants, and additional modeling tools based on both Lagrangian and Master Chemical Mechanism (MCM) runs, we have explained much of the disagreement between observed and predicted CH2O as resulting from non-steady-state atmospheric conditions in the vicinity of large pollution sources, and have quantified the disagreement as a function of plume lifetime (processing time). We show that in the near field (within ~4 to 6 h of the source), steady-state models can either over-or-underestimate observations, depending on the predominant non-steady-state influence. In addition, we show that even far field processes (10–40 h) can be influenced by non-steady-state conditions which can be responsible for CH2O model underestimations by ~20%. At the longer processing times in the 10 to 40 h range during Mexico City outflow events, MCM model calculations, using assumptions about initial amounts of high-order NMHCs, further indicate the potential importance of CH2O produced from unmeasured and multi-generation hydrocarbon oxidation compounds, particularly methylglyoxal, 3-hydroxypropanal, and butan-3-one-al.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16807324 and 16807316
Volume :
11
Issue :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c09e2e67b46b64af277e4cd087a45a08
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-11-11867-2011.