4.7 Article

Using machine learning to improve the estimate of US background ozone

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT
Volume 316, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2023.120145

Keywords

US background ozone; Anthropogenic ozone; Air quality modeling; Machine learning algorithms; Data fusion; Air pollution

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Background ozone refers to ground-level ozone in the absence of any domestic anthropogenic emissions. Recent adjustments to air quality models using data fusion techniques have shown an increased contribution of background ozone, exceeding national air quality standards in some regions.
U.S. background ozone is defined as ground-level ozone in the absence of any domestic anthropogenic emissions. It plays an important role in the U.S. regulatory framework, as it corresponds to the theoretical minimum ozone that can be achieved at a location. Although some studies estimated background ozone from observations, it cannot be measured directly, and therefore air quality models have been used to estimate its levels across different parts of the country. These estimates are uncertain given the inherent uncertainty in air quality modeling. Recently data fusion techniques have been used to improve those estimates using ground-level ozone observations and satellite data. Here, we used two adjustment methods to improve on air quality model-derived estimates of background ozone: a Multi-Variate Linear Regression (MVLR) model and a machine learning (ML) algorithm, called Random Forest (RF), with a focus on thirteen urban areas in the U.S. These adjustments regress observed ozone on the simulated background and anthropogenic ozone (by a regional air quality model) and their combinations with spatial and temporal variables. The RF-ML algorithm showed the biggest improvement in model performance, compared to MVLR and the base air quality model predictions. Applying the MVLR adjustment, the background ozone estimates increased in most locations. Furthermore, applying the RF ML model adjustment increased background ozone estimates even more, highlighting the enhanced contribution of background ozone in recent years that constitutes a larger portion of total ozone and exceeds NAAQS in some regions. Our results are consistent with other observational and modeling studies in that the highest background ozone levels were estimated in the western U.S. and over higher elevations.

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