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1.
Environ Int ; 184: 108473, 2024 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38340404

RESUMEN

Uncertainty in ammonia (NH3) emissions causes the inaccuracy of fine particulate matter simulations, which is associated with human health. To address this uncertainty, in this work, we employ the iterative finite difference mass balance (iFDMB) technique to revise NH3 emissions over East Asia using the Cross-track Infrared Sounder (CRIS) satellite for July, August, and September 2019. Compared to the emissions, the revised NH3 emissions show an increase in China, particularly in the North China Plain (NCP) region, corresponding to agricultural land use in July, August, and September and a decrease in South Korea in September. The enhancement in NH3 emissions resulted in a remarkable increase in concentrations of NH3 by 5 ppb. in July and September, there is an increase in ammonium (NH4+) and nitrate (NO3-) concentrations by 5 µg/m3, particularly in the NCP region, while in August, both NH4+ and NO3- concentrations exhibit a decrease. For sulfate (SO42-), in August and September, the concentrations decreased over most regions of China and Taiwan, as a result of the production of ammonium sulfate; increased concentrations of SO42-, however, were simulated over South Korea, Japan, and the southern region of Chengdu, caused by higher relative humidity (RH). In contrast, during the month of July, our simulations showed an increase in SO42- concentrations over most regions of China. To gain a more comprehensive understanding, we defined a sulfur conversion ratio ( [Formula: see text] ), which explains how changes in sulfur in the gas phase affect changes in sulfate concentrations. A subsequent sensitivity analysis performed in this study indicated the same relationship between changes in ammonia and its effect on inorganic fine particulate matter (PM2.5). This study highlights the challenge of controlling and managing inorganic PM2.5 and indicates that reducing the emissions of air pollutants do not necessarily lead to a reduction in their concentrations.


Asunto(s)
Contaminantes Atmosféricos , Amoníaco , Humanos , Amoníaco/análisis , Material Particulado/análisis , Contaminantes Atmosféricos/análisis , Asia Oriental , China , Sulfatos/análisis , Azufre , Monitoreo del Ambiente/métodos
2.
ACS Earth Space Chem ; 6(10): 2432-2445, 2022 Oct 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36303716

RESUMEN

India experiences some of the highest levels of ambient PM2.5 aerosol pollution in the world. However, due to the historical dearth of in situ measurements, chemical transport models that are often used to estimate PM2.5 exposure over the region are rarely evaluated. Here, we conduct a novel model comparison with speciated airborne measurements of fine aerosol, revealing large biases in the ammonium and nitrate simulations. To address this, we incorporate process-level changes to the model and use satellite observations from the Cross-track Infrared Sounder (CrIS) and the TROPOspheric Monitoring Instrument (TROPOMI) to constrain ammonia and nitrogen oxide emissions. The resulting simulation demonstrates significantly lower bias (NMBModified: 0.19; NMBBase: 0.61) when validated against the airborne aerosol measurements, particularly for the nitrate (NMBModified: 0.08; NMBBase: 1.64) and ammonium simulation (NMBModified: 0.49; NMBBase: 0.90). We use this validated simulation to estimate a population-weighted annual PM2.5 exposure of 61.4 µg m-3, with the RCO (residential, commercial, and other) and energy sectors contributing 21% and 19%, respectively, resulting in an estimated 961,000 annual PM2.5-attributable deaths. Regional exposure and sectoral source contributions differ meaningfully in the improved simulation (compared to the baseline simulation). Our work highlights the critical role of speciated observational constraints in developing accurate model-based PM2.5 aerosol source attribution for health assessments and air quality management in India.

3.
J Geophys Res Atmos ; 127(9): e2021JD035687, 2022 May 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35865809

RESUMEN

We conduct the first 4D-Var inversion of NH3 accounting for NH3 bi-directional flux, using CrIS satellite NH3 observations over Europe in 2016. We find posterior NH3 emissions peak more in springtime than prior emissions at continental to national scales, and annually they are generally smaller than the prior emissions over central Europe, but larger over most of the rest of Europe. Annual posterior anthropogenic NH3 emissions for 25 European Union members (EU25) are 25% higher than the prior emissions and very close (<2% difference) to other inventories. Our posterior annual anthropogenic emissions for EU25, the UK, the Netherlands, and Switzerland are generally 10%-20% smaller than when treating NH3 fluxes as uni-directional emissions, while the monthly regional difference can be up to 34% (Switzerland in July). Compared to monthly mean in-situ observations, our posterior NH3 emissions from both schemes generally improve the magnitude and seasonality of simulated surface NH3 and bulk NH x wet deposition throughout most of Europe, whereas evaluation against hourly measurements at a background site shows the bi-directional scheme better captures observed diurnal variability of surface NH3. This contrast highlights the need for accurately simulating diurnal variability of NH3 in assimilation of sun-synchronous observations and also the potential value of future geostationary satellite observations. Overall, our top-down ammonia emissions can help to examine the effectiveness of air pollution control policies to facilitate future air pollution management, as well as helping us understand the uncertainty in top-down NH3 emissions estimates associated with treatment of NH3 surface exchange.

4.
Geophys Res Lett ; 46(2): 1049-1060, 2019 Jan 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33867596

RESUMEN

TROPOMI, on-board the Sentinel-5 Precursor satellite is a nadir-viewing spectrometer measuring reflected sunlight in the ultraviolet, visible, near-infrared, and shortwave infrared spectral range. From these spectra several important air quality and climate-related atmospheric constituents are retrieved at an unprecedented high spatial resolution, including nitrogen dioxide (NO2). We present the first retrievals of TROPOMI NO2 over the Canadian Oil Sands, contrasting them with observations from the OMI satellite instrument, and demonstrate its ability to resolve individual plumes and highlight its potential for deriving emissions from individual mining facilities. Further, the first TROPOMI NO2 validation is presented, consisting of aircraft and surface in-situ NO2 observations, as well as ground-based remote-sensing measurements between March and May 2018. Our comparisons show that the TROPOMI NO2 vertical column densities are highly correlated with the aircraft and surface in-situ NO2 observations, and the ground-based remote-sensing measurements with a low bias (15-30 %) over the Canadian Oil Sands. PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY: Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) is a pollutant that is linked to respiratory health issues and has negative environmental impacts such as soil and water acidification. Near the surface the most significant sources of NO2 are fossil fuel combustion and biomass burning. With a recently launched satellite instrument (TROPOspheric Monitoring Instrument; TROPOMI) NO2 can be measured with an unprecedented combination of accuracy, spatial coverage, and resolution. This work presents the first TROPOMI NO2 measurements near the Canadian Oil Sands and shows that these measurements have an outstanding ability to detect NO2 on a very high horizontal resolution that is unprecedented for satellite NO2 observations. Further, these satellite measurements are in excellent agreement with aircraft and ground-based measurements.

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