Extension of a gaseous dry deposition algorithm to oxidized volatile organic compounds and hydrogen cyanide for application in chemistry transport models
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Published:2021-08-16
Issue:8
Volume:14
Page:5093-5105
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ISSN:1991-9603
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Container-title:Geoscientific Model Development
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Geosci. Model Dev.
Author:
Wu ZhiyongORCID, Zhang LeimingORCID, Walker John T., Makar Paul A., Perlinger Judith A., Wang Xuemei
Abstract
Abstract. The dry deposition process refers to flux loss of an atmospheric
pollutant due to uptake of the pollutant by the Earth's surfaces, including
vegetation, underlying soil, and any other surface types. In chemistry
transport models (CTMs), the dry deposition flux of a chemical species is
typically calculated as the product of its surface layer concentration and
its dry deposition velocity (Vd); the latter is a variable that needs to
be highly empirically parameterized due to too many meteorological,
biological, and chemical factors affecting this process. The gaseous dry
deposition scheme of Zhang et al. (2003) parameterizes Vd for 31
inorganic and organic gaseous species. The present study extends the scheme
of Zhang et al. (2003) to include an additional 12 oxidized volatile organic
compounds (oVOCs) and hydrogen cyanide (HCN), while keeping the original
model structure and formulas, to meet the demand of CTMs with increasing
complexity. Model parameters for these additional chemical species are
empirically chosen based on their physicochemical properties, namely the
effective Henry's law constants and oxidizing capacities. Modeled Vd
values are compared against field flux measurements over a mixed forest in
the southeastern US during June 2013. The model captures the basic
features of the diel cycles of the observed Vd. Modeled Vd values
are comparable to the measurements for most of the oVOCs at night. However,
modeled Vd values are mostly around 1 cm s−1 during daytime, which
is much smaller than the observed daytime maxima of 2–5 cm s−1.
Analysis of the individual resistance terms and uptake pathways suggests that
flux divergence due to fast atmospheric chemical reactions near the canopy
was likely the main cause of the large model–measurement discrepancies
during daytime. The extended dry deposition scheme likely provides
conservative Vd values for many oVOCs. While higher Vd values and
bidirectional fluxes can be simulated by coupling key atmospheric chemical
processes into the dry deposition scheme, we suggest that more experimental
evidence of high oVOC Vd values at additional sites is required to
confirm the broader applicability of the high values studied here. The
underlying processes leading to high measured oVOC Vd values require
further investigation.
Funder
National Key Research and Development Program of China National Natural Science Foundation of China
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
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