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Model studies of some atmospheric aerosols and comparisons with measurements

Model studies of some atmospheric aerosols and comparisons with measurements. K. G e o r g i e v I P P – B A S, S o f i a, B u l g a r i a. Introduction. DG Joint Research Centre of European Commission Institute for Environment and Sustainability (IES – JRC, Ispra, Italy)

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Model studies of some atmospheric aerosols and comparisons with measurements

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  1. Model studies of some atmospheric aerosols and comparisons with measurements K. G e o r g i e v I P P – B A S, S o f i a, B u l g a r i a

  2. Introduction DG Joint Research Centre of European Commission Institute for Environment and Sustainability (IES – JRC, Ispra, Italy) M. Krool, F. Dentener, E. Vignati

  3. Aerosols • big and increasing importance for the assessment of air quality and climate forcing; • play a crucial role for global temperature modifications; • research of aerosols in the surface layer is mainly motivated of their impact on human health and possible ecological effects.

  4. Aerosols Aerosols are defined as relatively stable suspensions of solid or liquid particles in a gas. The aerosols can be classified as primary(those that are emitted in particulate form directly from sources) and secondary(particles produced in the atmosphere).

  5. Aerosols The formation of the secondary aerosols can be done mainly by : • reaction of gases to form low–vapor–pressure products; • reaction of gases on the surfaces of existing particles to form condensed phase products; • chemical reactions within the aerosol itself (for example, SO2, oxidation to sulfate)

  6. TM5 Model TM5 – 3D global chemistry Transport Model Allows two-way nested zooming which leads to possibility to run the model on relatively very fine space grid(11)(longitude x latitude)over selected regions (Europe is most often used but North America, Africa, Asia and South America can be treated separately or in combinations) The coarsest space resolution is (64) and between these two is a grid (32)

  7. Zooming Europe

  8. Zooming Africa

  9. Zooming Asia

  10. Zooming North America

  11. Vertical resolution Dashed lines – the 60 hybrid sigma-pressure (terrain following) levels of the operational ECMWF model; Solid lines– the subset employed by the 25 layer European zoom model; fivelayers – boundary layer tenlayers– free troposphere tenlayers– stratosphere

  12. The model The TM5 model is designed for Global studies of atmospheric chemistry such as • intercontinental and interhemispheric exchange; • effects of grid refinement on the budgets of chemically active compounds.

  13. The model The TM5 model is an offline model, using preprocessed meteorological fields from ECMWF.

  14. The modelSplitting The basic model operations (advection, convection, sources, chemistry) are solved by symmetrical operator splitting

  15. The modelSplitting Symmetrical splitting can not always be presented in an zooming algorithm Note: X and Y – horizontal advection Z – vertical advection V – vertical diffusion and convection C – chemistry (incl. emissions and depositions)

  16. The modelSplitting Let  – the parents write the boundary conditions to their children  – the parents are updated with the information by their children

  17. The model – splittingThree-region European-focused TM5 version

  18. The modelChemistry Gas phase chemistry is calculated using the CBM-IV chemical mechanism solved by means of the EBI method. Photochemistry and aerosols are coupled in the IPCC version of the TM5 model.

  19. The modelAerosolChemistry Aerosols are assumed internally mixed and in an accumulation mode size distribution for the calculations of both scavenging and depositions. They can contain sulphate, ammonium and nitrate and are described using bulk approach.

  20. The modelAerosolChemistry The water attached to the particles is determined from the ambient relatively humidity. Sulphate is reduced to its aerosol phase. It is obtained by the oxidation of sulphur dioxide in the gas phase by OH radical. In the aqueous phase this oxidation is done by H2O2 and ozone.

  21. Aerosol studied • sulfate (SO4,); • ammonium (NH4); • nitrate (NO3) sulfur dioxide (SO2), ammonia (NH3) , nitric acid (HNO3) (due to some chemical transformations which play an essential role in creation and the live cycle of SO4, NH4, NO3)

  22. Aerosol measurements There are relatively enough EMEP stations (57) with measurements for sulfate and sulfur dioxide. The stations with available measurements for ammoniumandammoniaare 23 while the stations presenting measurements for nitrate and nitric acidare only 14 and not all of them have measurements for both.

  23. Aerosol measurements The measurements reported by the EMEP network stations are surface measurements. The model output predictions which are discussed and used for the comparisons are taken in the first model layer.

  24. Results vs measurements for sulphate

  25. Results vs measurements for sulphate The correlation between measurements end model results is relatively good. The model results underestimate the measurements in the most of the stations (65 %).

  26. Results vs measurements for sulphate and sulphur dioxide

  27. Results vs measurements for sulphate In total: 65 %  corr. coeff. > 0.5 >13 %  > 0.75 “GB” :> 90%  corr. coeff. > 0.5 36%  corr. coeff. > 0.75 “North” + “Central”:50%  corr. coeff. > 0.5

  28. Results vs measurements for sulphate and sulphur dioxide TM5 model overpredictssulphur dioxide and underpredictssulphate

  29. Results vs measurements for ammonium and ammonia TM5 model overestimateammonium and underestimateammonia

  30. Results vs measurements for nitrate and nitric acid TM5 model overpredictsnitrate and underpredictsnitric acid

  31. Implementation TM5 program has been coded in Fortran 90 Implemented and tested on: • IBM p690+ • SGI Origin 3800 • MAC OSX • SUN Cluster

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