The chemistry–climate model ECHAM6.3-HAM2.3-MOZ1.0
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Published:2018-05-04
Issue:5
Volume:11
Page:1695-1723
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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:
Schultz Martin G.ORCID, Stadtler ScarletORCID, Schröder Sabine, Taraborrelli DomenicoORCID, Franco Bruno, Krefting Jonathan, Henrot Alexandra, Ferrachat Sylvaine, Lohmann UlrikeORCID, Neubauer DavidORCID, Siegenthaler-Le Drian Colombe, Wahl Sebastian, Kokkola HarriORCID, Kühn ThomasORCID, Rast Sebastian, Schmidt HaukeORCID, Stier PhilipORCID, Kinnison Doug, Tyndall Geoffrey S.ORCID, Orlando John J., Wespes Catherine
Abstract
Abstract. The chemistry–climate model ECHAM-HAMMOZ contains a detailed representation
of tropospheric and stratospheric reactive chemistry and state-of-the-art
parameterizations of aerosols using either a modal scheme (M7) or a bin
scheme (SALSA). This article describes and evaluates the model version
ECHAM6.3-HAM2.3-MOZ1.0 with a focus on the tropospheric gas-phase chemistry.
A 10-year model simulation was performed to test the stability of the model
and provide data for its evaluation. The comparison to observations
concentrates on the year 2008 and includes total column observations of ozone
and CO from IASI and OMI, Aura MLS observations of temperature, HNO3,
ClO, and O3 for the evaluation of polar stratospheric
processes, an ozonesonde climatology, surface ozone observations from the
TOAR database, and surface CO data from the Global Atmosphere Watch network.
Global budgets of ozone, OH, NOx, aerosols, clouds, and radiation
are analyzed and compared to the literature. ECHAM-HAMMOZ performs well in
many aspects. However, in the base simulation, lightning NOx
emissions are very low, and the impact of the heterogeneous reaction of
HNO3 on dust and sea salt aerosol is too strong. Sensitivity
simulations with increased lightning NOx or modified heterogeneous
chemistry deteriorate the comparison with observations and yield excessively
large ozone budget terms and too much OH. We hypothesize that this is an
impact of potential issues with tropical convection in the ECHAM model.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
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