Science Inventory

DEVELOPMENT AND APPLICATION OF A NEW AIR POLLUTION MODELING SYSTEM. PART III: AEROSOL-PHASE SIMULATIONS (R823186)

Citation:

Jacobson, M. Z. DEVELOPMENT AND APPLICATION OF A NEW AIR POLLUTION MODELING SYSTEM. PART III: AEROSOL-PHASE SIMULATIONS (R823186). ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT. Elsevier Science Ltd, New York, NY, 31(4):587-608, (1997).

Description:

Result from a new air pollution model were tested against data from the Southern California Air Quality Study (SCAQS) period of 26-29 August 1987. Gross errors for sulfate, sodium, light absorption, temperatures, surface solar radiation, sulfur dioxide gas, formaldehyde gas, and ozone were lowest among parameters compared (1-40%). Gross errors for elemental carbon, organic carbon, total particulate mass, ammonium, ammonia gas, nitric acid gas, and light scattering, were larger (40-61%). Gross errors for particulate nitrate were largest (65-70%). Reducing the baseline land-based particulate emissions inventory to one-third its original value did not affect gross errors significantly; however, it did turn overpredictions into underpredictions for many species. Doubling emissions increased gross errors for nearly all parameters. Setting lateral boundary inflow concentrations of particles to zero caused slight (< 1%) erosion of results for most species, large erosion (10%) for sodium and chloride, but slight improvement (< 1%) for a few species. Setting both lateral inflow and initial concentrations for gases and particles to zero caused severe degradation of results for many species but relatively mild degradation or improvement for a few. Spinning up the meterological model 24 h in advance caused most gross errors to increase. Finally, the presence of aerosols reduced peak daytime surface solar radiation by approximately 6.4% (55 W m-2), increased nighttime temperatures by about 0.77 K, decreased daytime temperatures by about 0.08 K, and increased overall temperatures (day plus night) by 0.43 K compared to a no-aerosol case. The presence of aerosols also caused ozone mixing ratios to decrease by 2%.


Author Keywords: Air quality model; aerosol model; urban temperatures; ozone; Eulerian grid model

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:02/01/1997
Record Last Revised:12/22/2005
Record ID: 66689