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CRGAQS: Initial CAMx Results

CRGAQS: Initial CAMx Results. Presentation to the Gorge Study Technical Team By ENVIRON International Corporation October 31, 2006 ( boo! ). Today’s Presentation. Describe initial CAMx simulations Model configuration Performance evaluation metrics Performance for PM and light extinction

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CRGAQS: Initial CAMx Results

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  1. CRGAQS:Initial CAMx Results Presentation to the Gorge Study Technical Team By ENVIRON International Corporation October 31, 2006 (boo!)

  2. Today’s Presentation • Describe initial CAMx simulations • Model configuration • Performance evaluation metrics • Performance for PM and light extinction • Next Steps

  3. Model Configuration

  4. Model Configuration • CAMx version 4.40 • “Run 1” configuration • Maximize model speed • Mechanism 4 – CF (static 2-mode PM chemistry) • Bott advection solver • No PiG • OMP parallel processing on Linux quad-CPU • O’Brien Kv profile with 0.1 m2/s minimum • 10-day model spin-up period • 36-km grid only first 8 days • 36/12-km grid last 2 days

  5. Model Configuration • Episodes • August 10-22, 2004 • Meteorology from MM5 Run 6, 36/12-km grids • Flexi-nesting to the 4-km grid • November 4-18, 2004 • Meteorology from MM5 Run 3, all grids • Identified issues • Small temporal profile problem for fires • No on-road vehicle ammonia emissions in 4-km grid

  6. Performance Evaluation • Review spatial plots • Review statistical performance • Species • Individual PM species • Total PM2.5 and PM10 • Light scattering/extinction • Monitors • IMPROVE, Gorge sites, FRM/STN • Focus on sites along Gorge

  7. Performance Evaluation • Metrics • Fractional bias and gross error • Regression and correlation • Need to develop time series of scattering and extinction

  8. Performance Evaluation

  9. August 14, noon Pristine Performance Evaluation

  10. Performance Evaluation

  11. Performance Evaluation

  12. Statistics – IMPROVE August NO3 August SO4

  13. Statistics – IMPROVE August NH4 August OC

  14. Statistics – IMPROVE August EC August Primary Fine

  15. Statistics – IMPROVE August Primary Coarse August Total PM2.5

  16. Statistics – IMPROVE August Total PM10 August Bext

  17. Statistics – Gorge August NO3 August SO4

  18. Statistics – Gorge August NH4 August OC

  19. Statistics – Gorge August EC August Bscat

  20. Statistics – STN August NO3 August SO4

  21. Statistics – Gorge August NH4 August OC

  22. Statistics – Gorge August EC August FRM PM2.5

  23. Initial August Modeling • NO3, SO4, and NH4 were mostly under predicted • CAMx predictions higher at Gorge sites later in episode, but data were not available • More NH3 may increase NO3 and NH4 • OC was mostly over predicted at IMPROVE and Gorge sites • Driven by fires

  24. Initial August Modeling • EC was over predicted at IMPROVE but under predicted at Gorge sites • Reasons not clear – is Gorge EC backed out from aetholometer readings? • Total PM2.5 looks good • Balance of component over and under predictions • CM and PM10 were mostly under predicted at IMPROVE site

  25. Initial August Modeling • Reconstructed scattering and extinction look good • Due to good PM2.5 predictions and dry conditions • Contribution from under predicted hygroscopic salts just about balance contribution from over predicted carbon • CM doesn’t play a large role in visibility

  26. November 10, noon Pristine Performance Evaluation

  27. Performance Evaluation

  28. Performance Evaluation

  29. Statistics – IMPROVE November NO3 November SO4

  30. Statistics – IMPROVE November NH4 November OC

  31. Statistics – IMPROVE November EC November Primary Fine

  32. Statistics – IMPROVE November Primary Coarse November Total PM2.5

  33. Statistics – IMPROVE November Total PM10 November Bext

  34. Statistics – Gorge November NO3 November SO4

  35. Statistics – Gorge November NH4 November OC

  36. Statistics – Gorge November EC November Bscat

  37. Statistics – STN November NO3 November SO4

  38. Statistics – Gorge November NH4 November OC

  39. Statistics – Gorge November EC November FRM PM2.5

  40. Initial November Modeling • More NO3 and SO4 was observed and predicted than in the August episode. • OC and PM2.5 were much lower over domain than in August since wildfire season was over

  41. Initial November Modeling • SO4 performed well at IMPROVE sites, but was under predicted at the GORGE and STN sites • NO3 performance was scattered • NH4 was mostly under predicted • OC and EC performance OK, but there were some over prediction outliers

  42. Initial November Modeling • Primary fine and coarse (soil) was over predicted at all IMPROVE sites on all dates • Fine PM emissions may not reflect squelching effect of recent rains • Reconstructed total PM2.5 and PM10 slightly over predicted • Driven by carbon and primary over predictions

  43. Initial November Modeling • Extinction at IMPROVE sites was generally too low, while scattering at Gorge sites exhibits little skill • Under predicted salts are not contributing sufficient scattering • More NH3 might not help • Lack of modeled fog probably is not generating enough sulfates and nitrates

  44. Moving Forward • Sensitivity/Diagnostic runs • Revised emissions (fix identified problems) • Kv sensitivity • CMAQ approach • Alternative minimum Kz • Met sensitivity for August? (use Run 3) • Increase NH3 emissions • Reduce primary fine/coarse emissions in November

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