Multi-model study of HTAP II on sulfur and nitrogen deposition
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Published:2018-05-16
Issue:9
Volume:18
Page:6847-6866
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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:
Tan JianiORCID, Fu Joshua S.ORCID, Dentener FrankORCID, Sun Jian, Emmons LouisaORCID, Tilmes Simone, Sudo KengoORCID, Flemming Johannes, Jonson Jan Eiof, Gravel Sylvie, Bian Huisheng, Davila YankoORCID, Henze Daven K., Lund Marianne T., Kucsera Tom, Takemura ToshihikoORCID, Keating TerryORCID
Abstract
Abstract. This study uses multi-model ensemble results of 11 models from the second
phase of Task Force Hemispheric Transport of Air Pollution (HTAP II) to
calculate the global sulfur (S) and nitrogen (N) deposition in 2010. Modeled
wet deposition is evaluated with observation networks in North America,
Europe and East Asia. The modeled results agree well with observations, with
76–83 % of stations being predicted within ±50 % of
observations. The models underestimate SO42-, NO3- and
NH4+ wet depositions in some European and East Asian stations but
overestimate NO3- wet deposition in the eastern United States.
Intercomparison with previous projects (PhotoComp, ACCMIP and HTAP I) shows
that HTPA II has considerably improved the estimation of deposition at European
and East Asian stations. Modeled dry deposition is generally higher than the
“inferential” data calculated by observed concentration and modeled
velocity in North America, but the inferential data have high uncertainty,
too. The global S deposition is 84 Tg(S) in 2010, with 49 % in continental
regions and 51 % in the ocean (19 % of which coastal). The global N
deposition consists of 59 Tg(N) oxidized nitrogen (NOy) deposition and
64 Tg(N) reduced nitrogen (NHx) deposition in 2010. About 65 %
of N is deposited in continental regions, and 35 % in the ocean (15 %
of which coastal). The estimated outflow of pollution from land to ocean is
about 4 Tg(S) for S deposition and 18 Tg(N) for N deposition. Comparing our
results to the results in 2001 from HTAP I, we find that the global
distributions of S and N deposition have changed considerably during the
last 10 years. The global S deposition decreases 2 Tg(S) (3 %) from 2001
to 2010, with significant decreases in Europe (5 Tg(S) and 55 %), North
America (3 Tg(S) and 29 %) and Russia (2 Tg(S) and 26 %), and
increases in South Asia (2 Tg(S) and 42 %) and the Middle East (1 Tg(S)
and 44 %). The global N deposition increases by 7 Tg(N) (6 %),
mainly contributed by South Asia (5 Tg(N) and 39 %), East Asia (4 Tg(N)
and 21 %) and Southeast Asia (2 Tg(N) and 21 %). The NHx
deposition increases with no control policy on NH3 emission in North
America. On the other hand, NOy deposition has started to dominate in
East Asia (especially China) due to boosted NOx emission.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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