Understanding in situ ozone production in the summertime through radical observations and modelling studies during the Clean air for London project (ClearfLo)
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Published:2018-02-21
Issue:4
Volume:18
Page:2547-2571
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Whalley Lisa K., Stone DanielORCID, Dunmore RachelORCID, Hamilton Jacqueline, Hopkins James R.ORCID, Lee James D.ORCID, Lewis Alastair C., Williams Paul, Kleffmann Jörg, Laufs Sebastian, Woodward-Massey RobertORCID, Heard Dwayne E.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Measurements of OH, HO2, RO2i (alkene
and aromatic-related RO2) and total RO2 radicals taken during the
ClearfLo campaign in central London in the summer of 2012 are presented. A
photostationary steady-state calculation of OH which considered measured OH
reactivity as the OH sink term and the measured OH sources (of which
HO2+ NO reaction and HONO photolysis dominated) compared well with the
observed levels of OH. Comparison with calculations from a detailed box model
utilising the Master Chemical Mechanism v3.2, however, highlighted a
substantial discrepancy between radical observations under lower NOx
conditions ([NO] < 1 ppbv), typically experienced during the
afternoon hours, and indicated that the model was missing a significant
peroxy radical sink; the model overpredicted HO2 by up to a factor of
10 at these times. Known radical termination steps, such as HO2 uptake
on aerosols, were not sufficient to reconcile the model–measurement
discrepancies alone, suggesting other missing termination processes. This
missing sink was most evident when the air reaching the site had previously
passed over central London to the east and when elevated temperatures were
experienced and, hence, contained higher concentrations of VOCs. Uncertainties
in the degradation mechanism at low NOx of complex biogenic and diesel
related VOC species, which were particularly elevated and dominated OH
reactivity under these easterly flows, may account for some of the model–measurement disagreement. Under higher [NO] (> 3 ppbv) the box
model increasingly underpredicted total [RO2]. The modelled and
observed HO2 were in agreement, however, under elevated NO
concentrations ranging from 7 to 15 ppbv. The model uncertainty under low NO conditions leads to more ozone production
predicted using modelled peroxy radical concentrations
(∼ 3 ppbv h−1) versus ozone production from peroxy radicals
measured (∼ 1 ppbv h−1). Conversely, ozone production derived
from the predicted peroxy radicals is up to an order of magnitude lower than
from the observed peroxy radicals as [NO] increases beyond 7 ppbv due to the
model underprediction of RO2 under these conditions.
Funder
Natural Environment Research Council
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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