Photochemical modeling of hydroxyl and its relationship to other species during the Tropospheric OH Photochemistry Experiment

被引:119
作者
McKeen, SA
Mount, G
Eisele, F
Williams, E
Harder, J
Goldan, P
Kuster, W
Liu, SC
Baumann, K
Tanner, D
Fried, A
Sewell, S
Cantrell, C
Shetter, R
机构
[1] UNIV COLORADO, COOPERAT INST RES ENVIRONM SCI, BOULDER, CO 80309 USA
[2] NATL CTR ATMOSPHER RES, BOULDER, CO 80303 USA
关键词
METHYL VINYL KETONE; GAS-PHASE REACTIONS; CHEMICAL MECHANISM; UNITED-STATES; NIWOT-RIDGE; PHOTOSTATIONARY STATE; NATURAL HYDROCARBONS; ORGANIC-COMPOUNDS; PEROXY-RADICALS; ALPHA-PINENE;
D O I
10.1029/96JD03322
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
Because of the extremely short photochemical lifetime of tropospheric OH, comparisons between observation and model calculations should be an effective test of our understanding of the photochemical processes controlling the concentration of OH, the primary oxidant in the atmosphere. However, unambiguous estimates of calculated OH require sufficiently accurate and complete measurements of the key species and physical variables that determine OH concentrations. The Tropospheric OH Photochemistry Experiment (TOHPE) provides an extremely complete set of measurements, sometimes from multiple independent experimental platforms, that allows such a test to be conducted. When the calculations explicitly use observed NO, NO2, hydrocarbons, and formaldehyde, the photochemical model consistently overpredicts in situ observed OH by similar to 50% for the relatively clean conditions predominantly encountered at Idaho Hill. The model bias is much higher when only CH4-CO chemistry is assumed, or NO is calculated from the steady state assumption. For the most polluted conditions encountered during the campaign, the model results and observations show better agreement. Although the comparison between calculated and observed OH can be considered reasonably good given the +/-30% uncertainties of the OH instruments and various uncertainties in the model, the consistent bias suggests a fundamental difference between theoretical expectations and the measurements. Several explanations for this discrepancy are possible, including errors in the measurements, unidentified hydrocarbons, losses of HOx to aerosols and the Earth's surface, and unexpected peroxy radical chemistry. Assuming a single unidentified type of hydrocarbon is responsible, the amount of additional hydrocarbon needed to reduce theoretical OH to observed levels is a factor of 2 to 3 greater than the OH-reactivity-weighted hydrocarbon content measured at the site. Constraints can be placed on the production and yield of various radicals formed in the oxidation sequence by considering the observed levels of certain key oxidation products such as formaldehyde and acetaldehyde. The model results imply that, under midday clean westerly flow conditions, formaldehyde levels are fairly consistent with the OH and hydrocarbon observations, but observed acetaldehyde levels are a factor of 4 larger than what is expected and also imply a biogenic source. Levels of methacrolein and methylvinylketone are much lower than expected from steady state isoprene chemistry, which implies important removal mechanisms or missing information regarding the kinetics of isoprene oxidation within the model. In a prognostic model application, additional hydrocarbons are added to the model in order to force calculated OH to observed levels. Although the products and oxidation steps related to pinenes and other biogenic hydrocarbons are somewhat uncertain, the addition of a species with an oxidation mechanism similar to that expected from C-10 pinenes would be consistent with the complete set of observations, as opposed to naturally emitted isoprene or any of the anthropogenic hydrocarbons examined in the model. Further constraints on the abundance of peroxy radicals are necessary in order to fill the gaps in our understanding of OH photochemistry for the clean continental conditions typical of Idaho Hill.
引用
收藏
页码:6467 / 6493
页数:27
相关论文
共 49 条
[1]   TERPENES EMITTED FROM AGRICULTURAL SPECIES FOUND IN CALIFORNIA CENTRAL VALLEY [J].
AREY, J ;
WINER, AM ;
ATKINSON, R ;
ASCHMANN, SM ;
LONG, WD ;
MORRISON, CL ;
OLSZYK, DM .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 1991, 96 (D5) :9329-9336
[2]   PRODUCT STUDY OF THE GAS-PHASE REACTIONS OF MONOTERPENES WITH THE OH RADICAL IN THE PRESENCE OF NOX [J].
AREY, J ;
ATKINSON, R ;
ASCHMANN, SM .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 1990, 95 (D11) :18539-18546
[3]   AN UPDATED CHEMICAL MECHANISM FOR HYDROCARBON/NOX/SO2 PHOTO-OXIDATIONS SUITABLE FOR INCLUSION IN ATMOSPHERIC SIMULATION-MODELS [J].
ATKINSON, R ;
LLOYD, AC ;
WINGES, L .
ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 1982, 16 (06) :1341-1355
[4]  
Atkinson R., 1994, J PHYS CHEM REF DATA, V2, P1, DOI DOI 10.1016/j.jpowsour.2008.03.046
[5]   NOX MEASUREMENTS IN CLEAN CONTINENTAL AIR AND ANALYSIS OF THE CONTRIBUTING METEOROLOGY [J].
BOLLINGER, MJ ;
HAHN, CJ ;
PARRISH, DD ;
MURPHY, PC ;
ALBRITTON, DL ;
FEHSENFELD, FC .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 1984, 89 (ND6) :9623-9631
[6]   PEROXY-RADICALS AS MEASURED IN ROSE AND ESTIMATED FROM PHOTOSTATIONARY STATE DEVIATIONS [J].
CANTRELL, CA ;
SHETTER, RE ;
CALVERT, JG ;
PARRISH, DD ;
FEHSENFELD, FC ;
GOLDAN, PD ;
KUSTER, W ;
WILLIAMS, EJ ;
WESTBERG, HH ;
ALLWINE, G ;
MARTIN, R .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 1993, 98 (D10) :18355-18366
[7]   A DETAILED MECHANISM FOR THE GAS-PHASE ATMOSPHERIC REACTIONS OF ORGANIC-COMPOUNDS [J].
CARTER, WPL .
ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT PART A-GENERAL TOPICS, 1990, 24 (03) :481-518
[8]   Photostationary state analysis of the NO2-NO system based on airborne observations from the western and central North Pacific [J].
Crawford, J ;
Davis, D ;
Chen, G ;
Bradshaw, J ;
Sandholm, S ;
Gregory, G ;
Sachse, G ;
Anderson, B ;
Collins, J ;
Blake, D ;
Singh, H ;
Heikes, B ;
Talbot, R ;
Rodriguez, J .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 1996, 101 (D1) :2053-2072
[9]  
DEMORE WB, 1992, JPL PUBL, V9220