Response of biogenic secondary organic aerosol formation to anthropogenic NOx emission mitigation
This study investigates the effects of anthropogenic nitrogen oxide (NOx) mitigation reduction on secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation from monoterpene and sesquiterpene precursors across Europe, using the three-dimensional (3-D) Chemical Transport Model (CTM) CHIMERE. Two SOA mechanisms of var...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Science of the total environment 2024-06, Vol.927, p.172142-172142, Article 172142 |
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Zusammenfassung: | This study investigates the effects of anthropogenic nitrogen oxide (NOx) mitigation reduction on secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation from monoterpene and sesquiterpene precursors across Europe, using the three-dimensional (3-D) Chemical Transport Model (CTM) CHIMERE.
Two SOA mechanisms of varying complexity are employed: the GENOA-generated Biogenic Mechanism (GBM) and the Hydrophobic/Hydrophilic Organic mechanism (H2O). GBM is a condensed SOA mechanism generated by automatic reduction from near-explicit chemical mechanisms (i.e., the Master Chemical Mechanism - MCM and the peroxy radical autoxidation mechanism - PRAM) using the GENerator of Reduced Organic Aerosol Mechanisms version 2.0 (GENOA v2.0). Conversely, the H2O mechanism is developed primarily based on experimental data, with simplified chemical pathways and SOA formation yields reflecting those from chamber experiments.
In the 3-D simulations conducted for the summer of 2018 over Europe, the implementation of GBM significantly improved the model's performance in comparison to simulations using the H2O mechanism, yielding results more consistent with measured aerosol concentrations extracted from the EBAS database.
In response to NOx emission mitigation, simulated SOA concentrations increase with GBM but decrease when using the H2O mechanism, unless a highly oxygenated molecules (HOMs) formation scheme is incorporated. The SOA composition becomes more oxidized and concentrations elevate after NOx reduction, particularly in simulations using GBM. These higher concentrations are likely due to enhanced reaction rates of organic peroxy radicals (RO2) with HO2, resulting in more oxidized products from monoterpene degradation that favors HOM formation. The results suggest that detailed SOA mechanisms including autoxidation are necessary for accurate predictions of SOA concentrations in 3-D modeling.
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•Comparison of simulations with SOA mechanisms of different complexity: GBM vs. H2O•GBM outperforms H2O in matching observed aerosol data.•Biogenic SOA increase from NOx mitigation if detailed SOA mechanisms are used.•3-D simulations require detailed SOA mechanisms for accurate SOA responses. |
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ISSN: | 0048-9697 1879-1026 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.172142 |