Atmospheric oxidation in the Mexico City Metropolitan Area (MCMA) during April 2003

被引:170
作者
Shirley, T. R.
Brune, W. H. [1 ]
Ren, X.
Mao, J.
Lesher, R.
Cardenas, B.
Volkamer, R.
Molina, L. T.
Molina, M. J.
Lamb, B.
Velasco, E.
Jobson, T.
Alexander, M.
机构
[1] Penn State Univ, University Pk, PA 16802 USA
[2] Autonomous Metropolitan Univ, Mexico City, DF, Mexico
[3] MIT, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
[4] Washington State Univ, Pullman, WA 99164 USA
[5] Pacific NW Natl Lab, Richland, WA 99352 USA
关键词
D O I
10.5194/acp-6-2753-2006
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The Mexico City Metropolitan Area (MCMA) study in April 2003 had measurements of many atmospheric constituents, including OH and HO2. It provided the first opportunity to examine atmospheric oxidation in a megacity in a developing country that has more pollution than typical U. S. and European cities. At midday, OH typically reached 0.35 pptv ( similar to 7 x 10(6) cm(-3)), comparable to amounts observed in U. S. cities, but HO2 reached 40 pptv, more than observed in most U. S. cities. The OH reactivity was also measured, even during the highly polluted morning rush hour. MCMA's OH reactivity was 25 s(-1) during most of the day and 120 s(-1) at morning rush hour, which was several times greater than has been measured in any U. S. city. Median measured and modeled OH and HO2 agreed to within combined uncertainties, although for OH, the model exceeded the measurement by more than 30% during midday. OH production and loss, which were calculated from measurements, were in balance to within uncertainties, although production exceeded loss during morning rush hour. This imbalance has been observed in other cities. The HO2/ OH ratio from measurements and steady-state analyses have essentially the same dependence on NO, except when NO was near 100 ppbv. This agreement is unlike other urban studies, in which HO2/ OH ratio decreased much less than expected as NO increased. As a result of the active photochemistry in MCMA 2003, the median calculated ozone production from measured HO2 reached 50 ppb h(-1), a much higher rate than observed in U. S. cities.
引用
收藏
页码:2753 / 2765
页数:13
相关论文
共 32 条
[1]   Modeling OH, HO2, and RO2 radicals in the marine boundary layer 2.: Mechanism reduction and uncertainty analysis [J].
Carslaw, N ;
Jacobs, PJ ;
Pilling, MJ .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 1999, 104 (D23) :30257-30273
[2]   Missing OH reactivity in a forest: Evidence for unknown reactive biogenic VOCs [J].
Di Carlo, P ;
Brune, WH ;
Martinez, M ;
Harder, H ;
Lesher, R ;
Ren, XR ;
Thornberry, T ;
Carroll, MA ;
Young, V ;
Shepson, PB ;
Riemer, D ;
Apel, E ;
Campbell, C .
SCIENCE, 2004, 304 (5671) :722-725
[3]  
DUNLEA EJ, 2006, ATMOS CHEM PHYS DISC, V6, P2241
[4]   Urban atmospheric chemistry during the PUMA campaign 1:: Comparison of modelled OH and HO2 concentrations with measurements [J].
Emmerson, KM ;
Carslaw, N ;
Carpenter, LJ ;
Heard, DE ;
Lee, JD ;
Pilling, MJ .
JOURNAL OF ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY, 2005, 52 (02) :143-164
[5]   A laser-induced fluorescence instrument for detecting tropospheric OH and HO2:: Characteristics and calibration [J].
Faloona, IC ;
Tan, D ;
Lesher, RL ;
Hazen, NL ;
Frame, CL ;
Simpas, JB ;
Harder, H ;
Martinez, M ;
Di Carlo, P ;
Ren, XR ;
Brune, WH .
JOURNAL OF ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY, 2004, 47 (02) :139-167
[6]   The pressure dependence of the OH radical yield from ozone-alkene reactions [J].
Fenske, JD ;
Hasson, AS ;
Paulson, SE ;
Kuwata, KT ;
Ho, A ;
Houk, KN .
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A, 2000, 104 (33) :7821-7833
[7]   Measurement of free radicals OH and HO2 in Los Angeles smog [J].
George, LA ;
Hard, TM ;
O'Brien, RJ .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 1999, 104 (D9) :11643-11655
[8]   TROPOSPHERIC FREE-RADICAL DETERMINATION BY FAGE [J].
HARD, TM ;
OBRIEN, RJ ;
CHAN, CY ;
MEHRABZADEH, AA .
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 1984, 18 (10) :768-777
[9]  
Heard D. E., 2004, GEOPHYS RES LETT, V31
[10]   Ozone process insights from field experiments - part II: Observation-based analysis for ozone production [J].
Kleinman, LI .
ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 2000, 34 (12-14) :2023-2033