1 / 28

Application of the PTM-MCM to the TORCH-1 campaign

Application of the PTM-MCM to the TORCH-1 campaign. Steve Utembe, Mike Jenkin and David Johnson EPSR Group Department of Environmental Science and Technology. Studies using the PTM.

nizana
Download Presentation

Application of the PTM-MCM to the TORCH-1 campaign

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Application of the PTM-MCM to the TORCH-1 campaign Steve Utembe, Mike Jenkin and David Johnson EPSR Group Department of Environmental Science and Technology

  2. Studies using the PTM • Chemical development of air parcels arriving at Writtle site investigated, at six-hourly resolution for the entire campaign • 156 96-hours back trajectories obtained from NOAA • Chemical processing using CRI mechanism • Additional analysis of selected trajectories using MCM v3.1

  3. Brief description of the PTM s u n l i g h t c h e m i s t r y a n d t r a n s p o r t w e l l - m i x e d b o u n d a r y l a y e r b o x c a l c u l a t e o z o n e a l o n g p r e - s e l e c t e d t r a j e c t o r i e s o v e r E u r o p e e m i s s i o n s V O C a n d N O X 4-day back trajectory

  4. Emissions • UK anthropogenic emissions based on NAEI. • Anthropogenic emissions outside UK based on EMEP. • Biogenic VOC emissions based on Simpson (1995). • Idealised seasonal, weekly and diurnal variations applied. • NMVOC emissions speciation based on NAEI for ca. 70% of total. Remaining 30% assigned to surrogates for which chemistry treated.

  5. Emissions speciation: 124 anthropogenic NMVOC butane ethanol alkanes alkenes carbonyls fraction of total toluene alcohols ethers acids esters aromatics chloro-carbons

  6. Ozone: observed vs calculated

  7. Ozone observed vs calculated : sensitivity to trajectory height

  8. Emitted aromatic hydrocarbon: toluene

  9. Emitted aromatic hydrocarbons

  10. Emitted alkyne: acetylene

  11. Emitted alkanes

  12. Emitted cycloalkane: cyclohexane (used as a surrogate for all emitted cycloalkanes)

  13. Emitted alkenes and dienes

  14. Emitted biogenic hydrocarbon: isoprene

  15. Mean hydrocarbon concentrations

  16. Aldehyde with primary and secondary sources: HCHO preliminary HCHO measurements made by UEA

  17. Simulated aldehyde product distributions on 3 example trajectories (N.B. we have simulated concentration data on 1257 carbonyl compounds)

  18. Simulated ketone product distributions on 3 example trajectories

  19. Concentrations of selected carbonyl products from aromatics

  20. Concentrations of selected carbonyl products from biogenics

  21. Organic nitrates and relationship to precursor peroxy radicals • Ozone and organic nitrates are both produced from reaction of peroxy radicals with NO RO2 + NO [ROONO]* RO. + NO2 (R1) + MRONO2 (R2) Correlation between the concentration of the two • [RO2]i [RONO2]i/i where i = k1/k2

  22. Comparison of relative concentrations of RO2 radicals produced from reactions of OH with alkanes and alkenes (O’Brien et al. 1995) -hydroxy Alkyl peroxy RO2’s 24 hours chemical processing

  23. Concentrations at end of day 5 for a series of alkyl and -hydroxyalkyl peroxy radicals calculated with the MCM/PTM show similar distribution of peroxy radicals inferred from the organic nitrate observations of O'Brien et al. Alkyl peroxy RO2’s -hydroxy 5 days chemical processing

  24. Concentration distribution of C1-C5 alkyl nitrates in MCM3.1

  25. Concentration distribution of C2-C4 -hydroxy alkyl nitrates in MCM3.1

  26. Identifying top contributors to total carbonyl distribution in MCM v3.1 • There are 1257 carbonyls in MCM v3.1(!) • What are the dominant carbonyls in air masses of different degrees of photochemical processing?

  27. Top contributors to 90% of total carbonyl concentration CH3COCH3 HCHO Least photochemically processed MEK CH3CHO CH3COCH3 Most photochemically processed HCHO CH3CHO MEK Intermediate

  28. Concluding remarks • Simulation of TORCH-1 campaign using PTM-CRI has allowed emitted VOC speciation to be tested. Simulated and observed hydrocarbon concentrations were generally well correlated. • Simulated concentrations of 6 aromatics, acetylene, 1,3-butadiene and intermediate alkanes were in very good agreement with observations. • Simulated concentrations of alkenes and small alkanes tended to be slightly lower than observations. • Simulated concentrations of larger alkanes were generally greater than those observed: this mainly due to ‘surrogate’ contributions. • MCM allows study of distributions of concentrations of various classes of VOCs

More Related