Impact of wildfires on particulate matter in the Euro-Mediterranean in 2007: sensitivity to some parameterizations of emissions in air quality models
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Published:2019-01-22
Issue:2
Volume:19
Page:785-812
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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:
Majdi MarwaORCID, Turquety Solene, Sartelet Karine, Legorgeu Carole, Menut LaurentORCID, Kim YoungseobORCID
Abstract
Abstract. This study examines the uncertainties on air quality modeling associated with
the integration of wildfire emissions in chemistry-transport models (CTMs).
To do so, aerosol concentrations during the summer of 2007, which was marked
by severe fire episodes in the Euro-Mediterranean region especially in the
Balkans (20–31 July, 24–30 August 2007) and Greece (24–30 August 2007),
are analyzed. Through comparisons to observations from surface networks and
satellite remote sensing, we evaluate the abilities of two CTMs,
Polyphemus/Polair3D and CHIMERE, to simulate the impact of fires on the
regional particulate matter (PM) concentrations and optical properties.
During the two main fire events, fire emissions may contribute up to 90 %
of surface PM2.5 concentrations in the fire regions (Balkans and
Greece), with a significant regional impact associated with long-range
transport. Good general performances of the models and a clear improvement of
PM2.5 and aerosol optical depth (AOD) are shown when fires are taken
into account in the models with high correlation coefficients. Two sources of uncertainties are specifically analyzed in terms of surface PM2.5 concentrations and AOD using
sensitivity simulations: secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation from
intermediate and semi-volatile organic compounds (I/S-VOCs) and emissions'
injection heights. The analysis highlights that surface PM2.5
concentrations are highly sensitive to injection heights (with a sensitivity
that can be as high as 50 % compared to the sensitivity to I/S-VOC
emissions which is lower than 30 %). However, AOD which is vertically
integrated is less sensitive to the injection heights (mostly below 20 %)
but highly sensitive to I/S-VOC emissions (with sensitivity that can be as
high as 40 %). The maximum statistical dispersion, which quantifies
uncertainties related to fire emission modeling, is up to 75 % for
PM2.5 in the Balkans and Greece, and varies between 36 % and
45 % for AOD above fire regions. The simulated number of daily exceedance of World Health Organization (WHO)
recommendations for PM2.5 over the considered region reaches 30 days in
regions affected by fires and ∼10 days in fire plumes, which is
slightly underestimated compared to available observations. The maximum
statistical dispersion (σ) on this indicator is also large (with
σ reaching 15 days), showing the need for better understanding of the
transport and evolution of fire plumes in addition to fire emissions.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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