New methodology shows short atmospheric lifetimes of oxidized sulfur and nitrogen due to dry deposition
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Published:2021-06-02
Issue:11
Volume:21
Page:8377-8392
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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:
Hayden Katherine, Li Shao-Meng, Makar Paul, Liggio John, Moussa Samar G., Akingunola Ayodeji, McLaren RobertORCID, Staebler Ralf M.ORCID, Darlington AndreaORCID, O'Brien Jason, Zhang Junhua, Wolde Mengistu, Zhang LeimingORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The atmospheric lifetimes of pollutants determine their impacts on human
health, ecosystems and climate, and yet, pollutant lifetimes due to dry deposition over large regions have not been determined from measurements.
Here, a new methodology based on aircraft observations is used to determine
the lifetimes of oxidized sulfur and nitrogen due to dry deposition over
(3-6)×103 km2 of boreal forest in Canada. Dry deposition
fluxes decreased exponentially with distance from the Athabasca oil sands
sources, located in northern Alberta, resulting in lifetimes of 2.2–26 h. Fluxes were 2–14 and 1–18 times higher than model estimates for
oxidized sulfur and nitrogen, respectively, indicating dry deposition
velocities which were 1.2–5.4 times higher than those computed for models. A
Monte Carlo analysis with five commonly used inferential dry deposition algorithms indicates that such model underestimates of dry deposition
velocity are typical. These findings indicate that deposition to vegetation
surfaces is likely underestimated in regional and global chemical transport models regardless of the model algorithm used. The
model–observation gaps may be reduced if surface pH and quasi-laminar and aerodynamic resistances in algorithms are optimized as shown in the
Monte Carlo analysis. Assessing the air quality and climate impacts of atmospheric pollutants on regional and global scales requires improved
measurement-based understanding of atmospheric lifetimes of these
pollutants.
Funder
Environment and Climate Change Canada
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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