Chemical and dynamical identification of emission outflows during the HALO campaign EMeRGe in Europe and Asia
-
Published:2023-02-03
Issue:3
Volume:23
Page:1893-1918
-
ISSN:1680-7324
-
Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Förster Eric, Bönisch HaraldORCID, Neumaier Marco, Obersteiner FlorianORCID, Zahn Andreas, Hilboll Andreas, Kalisz Hedegaard Anna B., Daskalakis NikosORCID, Poulidis Alexandros Panagiotis, Vrekoussis MihalisORCID, Lichtenstern Michael, Braesicke PeterORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The number of large urban agglomerations is steadily
increasing worldwide. At a local scale, their emissions lead to air
pollution, directly affecting people's health. On a global scale, their
emissions lead to an increase of greenhouse gases, affecting climate. In
this context, in 2017 and 2018, the airborne campaign EMeRGe (Effect of
Megacities on the transport and transformation of pollutants on the Regional
to Global scales) investigated emissions of European and Asian major
population centres (MPCs) to improve the understanding and predictability of
pollution outflows. Here, we present two methods to identify and
characterise pollution outflows probed during EMeRGe. First, we use a set of
volatile organic compounds (VOCs) as chemical tracers to characterise air
masses by specific source signals, i.e. benzene from anthropogenic pollution
of targeted regions, acetonitrile from biomass burning (BB, primarily during
EMeRGe-Asia), and isoprene from fresh biogenic signals (primarily during
EMeRGe-Europe. Second, we attribute probed air masses to source regions and
estimate their individual contribution by constructing and applying a simple
emission uptake scheme for the boundary layer which combines FLEXTRA back
trajectories and EDGAR carbon monoxide (CO) emission rates (acronyms are
provided in the Appendix). During EMeRGe-Europe, we identified anthropogenic
pollution outflows from northern Italy, southern Great Britain, the
Belgium–Netherlands–Ruhr (BNR) area and the Iberian Peninsula. Additionally, our
uptake scheme indicates significant long-range transport of pollution from
the USA and Canada. During EMeRGe-Asia, the pollution outflow is dominated
by sources in China and Taiwan, but BB signals from Southeast Asia and India
contribute as well. Outflows of pre-selected MPC targets are identified in
less than 20 % of the sampling time, due to restrictions in flight
planning and constraints of the measurement platform itself. Still, EMeRGe
combines in a unique way near- and far-field measurements, which show
signatures of local and distant sources, transport and conversion
fingerprints, and complex air mass compositions. Our approach provides a
valuable classification and characterisation of the EMeRGe dataset, e.g. for
BB and anthropogenic influence of potential source regions and paves the
way for a more comprehensive analysis and various model studies.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
Reference48 articles.
1. Amodio, M., de Gennaro, G., Marzocca, A., Trizio, L., and Tutino, M.:
Assessment of Impacts Produced by Anthropogenic Sources in a Little City
near an Important Industrial Area (Modugno, Southern Italy), Sci. World J.,
2013, 1–10, https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/150397, 2013. 2. Andrés Hernández, M. D., Hilboll, A., Ziereis, H., Förster, E., Krüger, O. O., Kaiser, K., Schneider, J., Barnaba, F., Vrekoussis, M., Schmidt, J., Huntrieser, H., Blechschmidt, A.-M., George, M., Nenakhov, V., Harlass, T., Holanda, B. A., Wolf, J., Eirenschmalz, L., Krebsbach, M., Pöhlker, M. L., Kalisz Hedegaard, A. B., Mei, L., Pfeilsticker, K., Liu, Y., Koppmann, R., Schlager, H., Bohn, B., Schumann, U., Richter, A., Schreiner, B., Sauer, D., Baumann, R., Mertens, M., Jöckel, P., Kilian, M., Stratmann, G., Pöhlker, C., Campanelli, M., Pandolfi, M., Sicard, M., Gómez-Amo, J. L., Pujadas, M., Bigge, K., Kluge, F., Schwarz, A., Daskalakis, N., Walter, D., Zahn, A., Pöschl, U., Bönisch, H., Borrmann, S., Platt, U., and Burrows, J. P.: Overview: On the transport and transformation of pollutants in the outflow of major population centres – observational data from the EMeRGe European intensive operational period in summer 2017, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 22, 5877–5924, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-22-5877-2022, 2022. 3. Atkinson, R.: Atmospheric chemistry of VOCs and NOx, Atmos. Environ.,
34, 2063–2101, https://doi.org/10.1016/S1352-2310(99)00460-4, 2000. 4. Baklanov, A., Lawrence, M., Pandis, S., Mahura, A., Finardi, S., Moussiopoulos, N., Beekmann, M., Laj, P., Gomes, L., Jaffrezo, J.-L., Borbon, A., Coll, I., Gros, V., Sciare, J., Kukkonen, J., Galmarini, S., Giorgi, F., Grimmond, S., Esau, I., Stohl, A., Denby, B., Wagner, T., Butler, T., Baltensperger, U., Builtjes, P., van den Hout, D., van der Gon, H. D., Collins, B., Schluenzen, H., Kulmala, M., Zilitinkevich, S., Sokhi, R., Friedrich, R., Theloke, J., Kummer, U., Jalkinen, L., Halenka, T., Wiedensholer, A., Pyle, J., and Rossow, W. B.: MEGAPOLI: concept of multi-scale modelling of megacity impact on air quality and climate, Adv. Sci. Res., 4, 115–120, https://doi.org/10.5194/asr-4-115-2010, 2010. 5. Baklanov, A., Molina, L. T., and Gauss, M.: Megacities, air quality and
climate, Atmos. Environ., 126, 235–249, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.atmosenv.2015.11.059,
2016.
Cited by
6 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|