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Ozone process insights from field experiments Part I: Overview

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT
Volume 34, Issue 12-14, Pages 2001-2022

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S1352-2310(99)00456-2

Keywords

tropospheric ozone; modeling; ozone precursors; meteorological factors

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This paper gives an overview of selected approaches recently adopted to analyze observations from field experiments that characterize the tropospheric physics and chemistry of ozone and related oxidation products. Analysis of ambient oxidant and precursor concentration measurements, combined with meteorological observations, has provided important information about tropospheric processes. Projection of the response of tropospheric ozone concentrations to changes in precursor emissions is achieved through emissions based air quality models (AQMs). These models integrate several process elements from source emissions to meteorological and chemical phenomena. Through field campaigns, new knowledge has become available which has enabled workers to better understand the strengths and weaknesses of AQMs and their components. Examples of insightful results include: (a) reconciliation of ambient concentrations of speciated volatile organic compounds (VOCs) with estimates from emissions models, and inventories, (b) verification of chemical mechanisms for ozone formation from its precursors using approximations applicable in different chemical regimes, (c) inference of regimes of sensitivity in ozone concentration to changes in VOC and NOx precursors from ozone management practices, (d) conceptualization of important air mass transport and mixing processes on different spatial and temporal scales that affect ozone and precursor concentrations distributions, and (e) application of the analysis of spatial and temporal variance to infer the origins of chemical product transport, and precursor distributions. Studies from the first category have been used to improve emissions models substantially over previous forms. The remainder of the analyses has yielded valuable insight into the chemical and meteorological mechanisms at work on different spatial and temporal scales. The methods have provided an observationally based framework for effective choices to improve ozone management, notably in terms of NOx or VOC sensitive regimes. Investigation of meteorological processes relevant to ozone accumulation has illustrated the importance of accounting for both transport winds and the day-night vertical structure of the atmosphere in AQM analyses. Finally, variance analyses of O-3 concentrations with other aerometric parameters offer significant opportunities to use semi-empirically air monitoring data as a means determining space and time scales of O-3 variance, and detecting precursor emissions source-ozone receptor relationships. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

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