Impact of urban canopy meteorological forcing on aerosol concentrations
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Published:2018-10-04
Issue:19
Volume:18
Page:14059-14078
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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:
Huszar PeterORCID, Belda MichalORCID, Karlický JanORCID, Bardachova Tatsiana, Halenka TomasORCID, Pisoft PetrORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The regional climate model RegCM4 extended with the land surface model CLM4.5
was coupled to the chemistry transport model CAMx to analyze the impact of
urban meteorological forcing on surface fine aerosol (PM2.5)
concentrations for summer conditions over the 2001–2005 period, focusing on
the area of Europe. Starting with the analysis of the meteorological
modifications caused by urban canopy forcing, we found a significant increase
in urban surface temperatures (up to 2–3 K), a decrease of specific humidity (by
up to 0.4–0.6 gkg−1), a reduction of wind speed (up to −1 ms−1) and an enhancement of vertical turbulent diffusion coefficient
(up to 60–70 m2s−1). These modifications translated into significant changes in surface aerosol
concentrations that were calculated by a “cascading” experimental approach.
First, none of the urban meteorological effects were considered. Then, the
temperature effect was added, then the humidity and the wind, and finally, the
enhanced turbulence was considered in the chemical runs. This facilitated the
understanding of the underlying processes acting to modify urban aerosol
concentrations. Moreover, we looked at the impact of the individual aerosol
components as well. The urbanization-induced temperature changes resulted in
a decrease of PM2.5 by −1.5 to −2 µg m−3, while decreased
urban winds resulted in increases by 1–2 µg m−3. The enhanced
turbulence over urban areas resulted in decreases of PM2.5 by −2 µg m−3. The combined effect of all individual impact depends on
the competition between the partial impacts and can reach up to −3 µg m−3 for some cities, especially when the temperature impact was stronger
in magnitude than the wind impact. The effect of changed humidity was found
to be minor. The main contributor to the temperature impact is the
modification of secondary inorganic aerosols, mainly nitrates, while the wind
and turbulence impact is most pronounced in the case of primary aerosol (primary
black and organic carbon and other fine particle matter). The overall as well
as individual impacts on secondary organic aerosol are very small, with the
increased turbulence acting as the main driver. The analysis of the vertical
extent of the aerosol changes showed that the perturbations caused by urban
canopy forcing, besides being large near the surface, have a secondary
maximum for turbulence and wind impact over higher model levels, which is
attributed to the vertical extent of the changes in turbulence over urban
areas. The validation of model data with measurements showed good agreement,
and we could detect a clear model improvement in some areas when including
the urban canopy meteorological effects in our chemistry simulations.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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