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Ozone source apportionment during peak summer events over southwestern Europe
It is well established that in Europe, high O(3) concentrations are most pronounced in southern/Mediterranean countries due to the more favourable climatological conditions for its formation. However, the contribution of the different sources of precursors to O(3) formation within each country relat...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
2019
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7788066/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33424952 http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/acp-19-5467-2019 |
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author | Pay, María Teresa Gangoiti, Gotzon Guevara, Marc Napelenok, Sergey Querol, Xavier Jorba, Oriol García-Pando, Carlos Pérez |
author_facet | Pay, María Teresa Gangoiti, Gotzon Guevara, Marc Napelenok, Sergey Querol, Xavier Jorba, Oriol García-Pando, Carlos Pérez |
author_sort | Pay, María Teresa |
collection | PubMed |
description | It is well established that in Europe, high O(3) concentrations are most pronounced in southern/Mediterranean countries due to the more favourable climatological conditions for its formation. However, the contribution of the different sources of precursors to O(3) formation within each country relative to the imported (regional and hemispheric) O(3) is poorly quantified. This lack of quantitative knowledge prevents local authorities from effectively designing plans that reduce the exceedances of the O(3) target value set by the European air quality directive. O(3) source attribution is a challenge because the concentration at each location and time results not only from local biogenic and anthropogenic precursors, but also from the transport of O(3) and precursors from neighbouring regions, O(3) regional and hemispheric transport and stratospheric O(3) injections. The main goal of this study is to provide a first quantitative estimation of the contribution of the main anthropogenic activity sectors to peak O(3) events in Spain relative to the contribution of imported (regional and hemispheric) O(3). We also assess the potential of our source apportionment method to improve O(3) modelling. Our study applies and thoroughly evaluates a countrywide O(3) source apportionment method implemented in the CALIOPE air quality forecast system for Spain at high resolution (4 × 4 km(2)) over a 10-day period characterized by typical summer conditions in the Iberian Peninsula (IP). The method tags both O(3) and its gas precursor emissions from source sectors within one simulation, and each tagged species is subject to the typical physico-chemical processes (advection, vertical mixing, deposition, emission and chemistry) as the actual conditions remain unperturbed. We quantify the individual contributions of the largest NO(x) local sources to high O(3) concentrations compared with the contribution of imported O(3). We show, for the first time, that imported O(3) is the largest input to the ground-level O(3) concentration in the IP, accounting for 46 %–68 % of the daily mean O(3) concentration during exceedances of the European target value. The hourly imported O(3) increases during typical northwestern advections (70 %–90 %, 60–80 μg m(−3)), and decreases during typical stagnant conditions (30 %–40 %, 30–60 μg m(−3)) due to the local NO titration. During stagnant conditions, the local anthropogenic precursors control the O(3) peaks in areas downwind of the main urban and industrial regions (up to 40 % in hourly peaks). We also show that ground-level O(3) concentrations are strongly affected by vertical mixing of O(3)-rich layers present in the free troposphere, which result from local/regional layering and accumulation, and continental/hemispheric transport. Indeed, vertical mixing largely explains the presence of imported O(3) at ground level in the IP. Our results demonstrate the need for detailed quantification of the local and remote contributions to high O(3) concentrations for local O(3) management, and show O(3) source apportionment to be an essential analysis prior to the design of O(3) mitigation plans in any non-attainment area. Achieving the European O(3) objectives in southern Europe requires not only ad hoc local actions but also decided national and European-wide strategies. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-7788066 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2019 |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-77880662021-01-07 Ozone source apportionment during peak summer events over southwestern Europe Pay, María Teresa Gangoiti, Gotzon Guevara, Marc Napelenok, Sergey Querol, Xavier Jorba, Oriol García-Pando, Carlos Pérez Atmos Chem Phys Article It is well established that in Europe, high O(3) concentrations are most pronounced in southern/Mediterranean countries due to the more favourable climatological conditions for its formation. However, the contribution of the different sources of precursors to O(3) formation within each country relative to the imported (regional and hemispheric) O(3) is poorly quantified. This lack of quantitative knowledge prevents local authorities from effectively designing plans that reduce the exceedances of the O(3) target value set by the European air quality directive. O(3) source attribution is a challenge because the concentration at each location and time results not only from local biogenic and anthropogenic precursors, but also from the transport of O(3) and precursors from neighbouring regions, O(3) regional and hemispheric transport and stratospheric O(3) injections. The main goal of this study is to provide a first quantitative estimation of the contribution of the main anthropogenic activity sectors to peak O(3) events in Spain relative to the contribution of imported (regional and hemispheric) O(3). We also assess the potential of our source apportionment method to improve O(3) modelling. Our study applies and thoroughly evaluates a countrywide O(3) source apportionment method implemented in the CALIOPE air quality forecast system for Spain at high resolution (4 × 4 km(2)) over a 10-day period characterized by typical summer conditions in the Iberian Peninsula (IP). The method tags both O(3) and its gas precursor emissions from source sectors within one simulation, and each tagged species is subject to the typical physico-chemical processes (advection, vertical mixing, deposition, emission and chemistry) as the actual conditions remain unperturbed. We quantify the individual contributions of the largest NO(x) local sources to high O(3) concentrations compared with the contribution of imported O(3). We show, for the first time, that imported O(3) is the largest input to the ground-level O(3) concentration in the IP, accounting for 46 %–68 % of the daily mean O(3) concentration during exceedances of the European target value. The hourly imported O(3) increases during typical northwestern advections (70 %–90 %, 60–80 μg m(−3)), and decreases during typical stagnant conditions (30 %–40 %, 30–60 μg m(−3)) due to the local NO titration. During stagnant conditions, the local anthropogenic precursors control the O(3) peaks in areas downwind of the main urban and industrial regions (up to 40 % in hourly peaks). We also show that ground-level O(3) concentrations are strongly affected by vertical mixing of O(3)-rich layers present in the free troposphere, which result from local/regional layering and accumulation, and continental/hemispheric transport. Indeed, vertical mixing largely explains the presence of imported O(3) at ground level in the IP. Our results demonstrate the need for detailed quantification of the local and remote contributions to high O(3) concentrations for local O(3) management, and show O(3) source apportionment to be an essential analysis prior to the design of O(3) mitigation plans in any non-attainment area. Achieving the European O(3) objectives in southern Europe requires not only ad hoc local actions but also decided national and European-wide strategies. 2019-04-25 /pmc/articles/PMC7788066/ /pubmed/33424952 http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/acp-19-5467-2019 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License. |
spellingShingle | Article Pay, María Teresa Gangoiti, Gotzon Guevara, Marc Napelenok, Sergey Querol, Xavier Jorba, Oriol García-Pando, Carlos Pérez Ozone source apportionment during peak summer events over southwestern Europe |
title | Ozone source apportionment during peak summer events over southwestern Europe |
title_full | Ozone source apportionment during peak summer events over southwestern Europe |
title_fullStr | Ozone source apportionment during peak summer events over southwestern Europe |
title_full_unstemmed | Ozone source apportionment during peak summer events over southwestern Europe |
title_short | Ozone source apportionment during peak summer events over southwestern Europe |
title_sort | ozone source apportionment during peak summer events over southwestern europe |
topic | Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7788066/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33424952 http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/acp-19-5467-2019 |
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