1 / 12

Inventory Issues and Modeling- Some Examples

Inventory Issues and Modeling- Some Examples. Brian Timin USEPA/OAQPS October 21, 2002. Purpose. Show examples of how certain inventory issues affect modeling results Will focus on: Ammonia Crustal/fugitive Fires PM2.5 speciation profiles. Ammonia.

badrani
Download Presentation

Inventory Issues and Modeling- Some Examples

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Inventory Issues and Modeling- Some Examples Brian Timin USEPA/OAQPS October 21, 2002

  2. Purpose • Show examples of how certain inventory issues affect modeling results • Will focus on: • Ammonia • Crustal/fugitive • Fires • PM2.5 speciation profiles

  3. Ammonia • Particulate nitrate is generally overpredicted in CMAQ • Ammonia emissions play a key role in the nitrate overpredictions • ORD has completed ammonia “inverse modeling” based on measurements of ammonium wet deposition • 1990 ammonia inventory appears to be overestimated • Reduced ammonia emissions from livestock by 20-60% in our 1996 modeling inventory for each month (from previous seasonal profiles) in our latest model runs • We have found that nitrate is still overpredicted with reduced ammonia emissions

  4. CMAQ Ammonia Sensitivity Runs- 50% NH3 Reduction- January Basecase Nitrate Nitrate with 50% Ammonia Reduction

  5. Crustal/Fugitive Emissions and Speciation Profiles • Crustal/other primary PM2.5 • SCC specific speciation profiles are used to speciate the primary PM2.5 emissions into organic carbon, elemental carbon, primary nitrate, primary sulfate, and “unspeciated PM2.5”. • Many of the profiles have a large percentage of unspeciated PM2.5 • The unspeciated mass is tracked in the model as other/crustal (PMFINE in REMSAD and A25 in CMAQ) • In urban areas, the annual average modeled unspeciated PM2.5 concentrations can be as high as 5-10 ug/m3.

  6. Crustal/Fugitive Emissions and Speciation Profiles • The measured “other PM” in urban areas is generally < 1 ug/m3 • What is unspeciated PM? Does it really belong in another category? • Why is there so much of it predicted in urban areas? • Largest sources are paved roads, construction, and open burning • Updates to speciation profiles may reduce unspeciated portion of PM2.5 and may lead to improved primary carbon inventories • The largest contributors to “other PM2.5” should be closely examined to see where estimation improvements can be made

  7. January Average Crustal/Other PM2.5

  8. Fire Emissions • Burning emissions • Separate SCC’s for wildfires, prescribed burning, agricultural burning, slash burning, and open burning • Wildfires- we removed them from our modeling • We do not know when and where wildfires occurred in 1996 • WRAP has a new inventory for 1996 that we may be able to use • Lack of wildfires is likely contributing to an underestimate in organic carbon (especially in the West) • Prescribed burning- included in current modeling • Relatively large amount of prescribed burning emissions in certain parts of the country • Some States have large prescribed burning emissions (based on State submitted data), some States have none (based on the lack of State submitted data)

  9. Modeling/Inventory Issues Burning Emissions • Seasonal factors for prescribed burning need to be examined • We are currently allocating 65% of the prescribed burning to the spring • Seasonal factors should probably vary by region • This creates unrealistic model results when transitioning between seasons

  10. Effect of Prescribed Burning on Primary Organics

  11. Link Between Emissions Modeling and Meteorology • Emissions of many species are strongly linked with meteorology • Currently incorporate meteorological variables into biogenic and mobile models • All of the previous examples are influenced by meteorology • Ammonia • Temperature, wind speed • Fugitive dust • Moisture, wind speed • Fires • Winds, mixing • In the long term, many of these emissions types may need to be incorporated into models which account for meteorology

  12. Summary • There are many existing uncertainties in inventory categories that can have large impacts on the modeling results • The inventory community is beginning to address many of these “issues” • New emissions models that incorporate meteorological variables may be necessary to adequately characterize spatial and temporal emissions patterns • The modeling community can help identify and prioritize issues as they impact modeling

More Related