organic aerosol: budgets, beetles and bewilderment dalhousie university august 24, 2012 colette l....
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Organic Aerosol:Budgets, Beetles and Bewilderment
Dalhousie UniversityAugust 24, 2012
Colette L. Healdwith contributions from Bonne Ford, Ashley Berg and Qi Chen
With thanks to : many individuals for invaluable field and satellite measurements
THE DISPROPORTIONATE IMPACT OF PARTICULATE MATTER ON THE GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT
Global premature deaths from environmental risk
Global radiative forcing
By 2030 PM surpasses unsafe water as the leading environmental cause of premature deaths.PM is the largest source of uncertainty in global radiative forcing.
[OECD, 2012]
[IPCC, 2007]
ORGANIC AEROSOL MAKES UP AN IMPORTANT/DOMINANT FRACTION OF OBSERVED AEROSOL
Globally makes up 25-75% of total fine aerosol at the surface (ignoring dust here).Could become more even more important in the future with sulphate clean-up?
[Zhang et al., 2007]SulphateOrganics
WHAT IS AN ORGANIC AEROSOL?(THE CHALLENGE OF CHEMICAL COMPLEXITY)
Sulfuric acid always looks like this:
Soot consists only of carbon (just in different configurations):
H2SO4
NO YES
Composition is KNOWN and CONSTANT
And also things like this
Composition is largely UNKNOWN and VARIABLE.
Each peak is an individual molecule (i.e. organic
chemistry is crazy)
A LARGE MISSING SOURCE OF ORGANIC AEROSOL?
Models are woefully inadequate. Could be up to 10x more OA in atmosphere than sulphate!
Models drastically underestimate SOA from 4 campaigns [Volkamer et al., 2006]
ACE-Asia (2001): 3 groups measured high OA off Asia. GEOS-Chem simulation factor of 10-100 too low [Heald et al., 2005]
Goldstein and Galbally [2007] suggest that SOA source may be anywhere
from 140-910 TgC/yr.
Obs (Maria et al., 2003)GEOS-Chem
MY TALK TODAY
Part 3: Bewildering aerosol in the Southeastern US
Part 1: Constraints on the global budget of OA
Part 2: Impacts of the pine beetle infestation
Despite lack of mechanistic understanding of OA formation/loss, we have made progress in the last couple of years by using multiple
dimensions of ambient measurements to evaluate/probe models:
1.Mass [de Gouw et al., 2005; Heald et al., 2005; Volkamer et al., 2006, etc, etc.]2.Correlation / variability [Heald et al., 2006; Carlton et al., 2008]3.Spatial distribution [Heald et al., 2010]4.Source signatures from mass spectra [Hodzic et al., 2009; Spracklen et al., 2011]5.Vertical profile [Heald et al., 2005; 2006; 2011; Carlton et al., 2008]6.Elemental composition [Murphy et al., 2011; Chen et al., in prep]
AN UNDERCONSTRAINED PROBLEM THAT REQUIRES A TOP-DOWN APPROACH
910
47 Existing GEOS-Chem sources
140 Our satellite top-down estimate
150
Bottom-up estimate [Goldstein and Galbally, 2007]
All units in TgCyr-1
Satellite-based estimate[Heald et al., 2010]
AMS surface-based optimization [Spracklen et al., 2011]
82
24 POA (fixed)
SOA (optimized)
EXPLORING THE VERTICAL DIMENSION
* All AMS measurements, except ITCT-2K4 (PILS) and ACE-Asia (filters).
17 aircraft field campaigns (2001-2009)
Aircraft constraints on the organic aerosol distribution through depth of troposphere in remote, polluted and fire influenced regions.
GOAL: investigate vertical profile and compare with one CONSISTENT model.
Measurements PIs: Hugh Coe (ITOP, ADRIEX, DABEX, DODO, AMMA, ADIENT, EUCAARI, OP3, VOCALS-UK, TROMPEX), Jose Jimenez, (MILAGRO, IMPEX, ARCTAS), R. Weber (ITCT-2K4), Ann Middlebrook (TexAQS), Lynn Russell (ACE-Asia)
GEOS-Chem SOA simulation: 2 product model, monoterpenes/sesquiterpenes +OH/O3/NO3 (Griffin et al, 1999), low-NOx isoprene+OH (Kroll et al., 2006), NOx dependent aromatics +OH(Ng et al., 2007) latest description Henze et al., 2008
COMPARISON OF VERTICAL PROFILE
General profile: drops off with altitude, with BB plumes aloft.
Over remote regions, little structure to profile. Outliers:
AMMA, ACE-Asia.
Model roughly captures profile.
“Reasonable” assumption on profiles made in Heald et al.
[2010] looking at satellite
CAN WE ATTRIBUTE THE MODEL
UNDERESTIMATE?
Adding ~100 Tg/yr source of ASOA (as suggested by
Spracklen et al., 2011) improves comparison in polluted regions, but leads to too much OA aloft
and in remote regions.
OA sink?
*ASOA = anthropogenically controlled SOA
A POSSIBLE ORGANIC AEROSOL SINK
time
Oxidation in atmosphere = ↓ volatility = more particle
FUNCTIONALIZATION (Adding oxygen)
FRAGMENTATION (Breaking into smaller molecules)
Oxidation in atmosphere = ↓ volatility= ↑ volatility
Acts like a “sink” of particles
time
Lots (too much?) particle formation
mas
sm
ass
For the first time, test the impact of this fragmentation “sink” in a model.
Estimate that gas-phase fragmentation can decrease global SOA burden by up to 50%. Heterogeneous oxidation impact less (16%).
Adding ~100 Tg/yr of ASOA and a gas fragmentation sink brings model simulation to within 1 g/m3 of observed concentrations in 15 of 17 campaigns.
Model may need SOURCES and SINKS.
ASOAx30ASOAx30
+ fragmentation sink
IMPACT OF ADDING BOTH SOURCES AND FRAGMENTATION SINK ON COMPARISONS WITH FIELD DATA
[Heald et al., 2011]
Baseline
Gas-phase oxidation, kOH=2x10-11 cm3/molecules/sHeterogeneous oxidation kOH=1x10-12 cm3/molecules/s5% lost to fragmentation
ADDING ANOTHER DIMENSION: THE OXYGEN CONTENT OF OA
Qi Chen (MIT)
Example of fitting 2 product elemental composition (isoprene +OH, low NOx)
POA Biogenic SOA Aromatic SOA
Estimated initial O:C from fitting/literature(for species in GEOS-Chem)
0.15
0.10
0.05
0.00
Yie
ld
0.1 1 10 100 1000
Morg (µg m-3
)
1 1(O/C) ; (H/C)
2 2(O/C) ; (H/C)
1.1
1.0
0.9
0.8
0.7
0.6
O/C
0.1 1 10 100
Morg
O:C ; H:C
at various
αi and kom,i
Significant range in O:C, even without accounting for aging. Is it enough to account for observed O:C?
Is O:C a useful constraint?
Surface O:C
SIMULATING THE O:C OF ORGANIC AEROSOL
January 2006 June 2006
Without aging surface O:C ranges from 0.2-0.8 (0.4 ± 0.1 for 60˚S to 60˚N), with little seasonal difference. Dominated by POAi and isoprene SOA.
Base GEOS-Chem SimulationPOAo: O:C=0.05, H:C=1.8POAi: O:C=0.30, H:C=1.5τ = 1.15 days
COMPARISON WITH OBSERVATIONS
O:C values captured near-source, but
underestimated in aged environments.
Mass underestimated in all environments…
1.0
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2O
/C0.6
0.4
0.2
0.0
-0.2
Obs
. - M
ode
l O/C
0.1
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Obs
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exico
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Beijing
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Shang
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hina
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Jiaxin
g, P
RD, Chin
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Urban Downwind Rural / Remote
OCPO OCPI BSOA ASOA
Model Observations
Base Simulation
1.0
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
O/C
0.6
0.4
0.2
0.0
-0.2
Obs
. - M
odel
O/C
0.1
1
10
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0.1
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razil
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Finoka
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Mon
tseny
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Kaiping
, PRD, C
hina
Mex
ico C
ity (T
0), M
exico
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NYC, U
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ide, C
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Beijing
, Chin
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Shang
hai, C
hina
Shenz
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Jiaxin
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RD, Chin
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Urban Downwind Rural / Remote
OCPO OCPI BSOA ASOA
Model Observations
Base Simulation
Thanks to several groups for providing data. More data from Jimenez Group and Qi Zhang will become available.
1.0
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2O
/C0.6
0.4
0.2
0.0
-0.2
Obs
. - M
odel
O/C
0.1
1
10
100
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ass
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razil
Borne
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alays
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South
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tler M
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Finoka
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Mon
tseny
, Spa
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Kaiping
, PRD, C
hina
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ico C
ity (T
0), M
exico
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NYC, U
S
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ide, C
A, US
Beijing
, Chin
a
Shang
hai, C
hina
Shenz
hen,
Chin
a
Jiaxin
g, P
RD, Chin
a
Urban Downwind Rural / Remote
OCPO OCPI BSOA ASOA
Model Observations
ASOA x 30
1.0
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
O/C
0.6
0.4
0.2
0.0
-0.2
Obs
. - M
odel
O/C
0.1
1
10
100
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rg
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Obs
./Mod
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South
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Whis
tler M
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Mon
tseny
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Kaiping
, PRD, C
hina
Mex
ico C
ity (T
0), M
exico
Queen
s Coll
ege,
NYC, U
S
Rivers
ide, C
A, US
Beijing
, Chin
a
Shang
hai, C
hina
Shenz
hen,
Chin
a
Jiaxin
g, P
RD, Chin
a
Urban Downwind Rural / Remote
OCPO OCPI BSOA ASOA
Model Observations
Base Simulation
Revised Simulation (ASOA x 30)POAo: O:C=0.05, H:C=1.8POAi: O:C=0.30, H:C=1.5τ = 1.15 days
HOW DOES INCREASING ASOA CHANGE THE PICTURE?
Addition of ASOA improves model simulation of mass (as in Spracklen et al., 2011; Heald et
al., 2011).
O:C better captured in aged regions (BUT suggests we may
need to invoke aging mechanisms), but O:C in source
regions can now be overestimated (ASOA actually a
source with lower O:C?)
Bottom line: what mechanisms/sources can
improve simulation of both mass and O:C?
MY TALK TODAY
Part 3: Bewildering aerosol in the Southeastern US
Part 1: Constraints on the global budget of OA
Part 2: Impacts of the pine beetle infestation
PINE BEETLE INFESTATION IN WESTERN NORTH AMERICAWorst beetle outbreak in recorded history: peaked in BC in 2007 and in the Western US in 2009
[Kurz et al., 2008]
Over 100,000 km2 of forest killed, continued expansion.
Impacts: carbon cycling, fire susceptibility.
What about air quality?
VOCs ↓Mortality Effect↑Attack Effect
VOCs?O3
PINE BEETLES PERTURBING MONOTERPENE EMISSIONS
Very few quantitative studies have been done
Amin et al. (2012) measure emissions from Lodgepole pine (and
spruce) under attack by mountain pine beetle, see significant
enhancements of some emissions.
Ashley Berg (CSU)
ESTIMATED IMPACTS ON MONOTERPENE EMISSIONS
Largest impact of MPB on monoterpene emissions in British Columbia in 2004
(increase up to 70%) and in 2008 in US (increase up to 104%).
Mortality Effect
Mortality Effect + Attack Effect
VEGETATION DISTRIBUTIONS
(CLM4)
ANNUALMORTALITY
(Meddens et al., in press)
EXPERIMENTAL VOC INCREASES
(Amin et al., 2012)
VOC EMISSIONS IN CLM4 (MEGAN2.1)(Guenther et al., in press)
β-pinene, β-phellandrene, 3-carene, P-cymene
2004
2008
ESTIMATED IMPACTS ON MONOTERPENE EMISSIONS
[Berg et al., in prep]
Mortality Effect
Mortality Effect + Attack Effect
2004
2008
VEGETATION DISTRIBUTIONS
(CLM4)
ANNUALMORTALITY
(Meddens et al., in press)
EXPERIMENTAL VOC INCREASES
(Amin et al., 2012)
VOC EMISSIONS IN CLM4 (MEGAN2.1)(Guenther et al., in press)
CHAMBER SOA YIELDS (6-55%)
(Lee et al., 2006)
More muted impact on SOA (~30-40% max increases) but also more regional.
Dependent on very uncertain species-variable response: scenario using spruce
data shows up to doubling of SOA (1 µgm-3 increase).
Evidence of importance of land use change in air quality.
MY TALK TODAY
Part 3: Bewildering aerosol in the Southeastern US
Part 1: Constraints on the global budget of OA
Part 2: Impacts of the pine beetle infestation
IS OA CONTRIBUTING TO CLIMATE TRENDS IN SOUTHEASTERN US?
[Portmann et al., 2009]
Summertime trend in Maximum T (1950-2006)
Data: Global Historical Climate Network Daily (GHCND)
“Although clearly speculative, increasing biogenic secondary organic aerosol/cloud effects linked to
forest regrowth and/or interactions with anthropogenic pollution
is one possibility that is qualitatively consistent, not only with the spatial structure, but also with the seasonality of the correlation of the unusual negative temperature trends with precipitation
found in the southeastern United States.”[Goldstein et al., 2009]
Seasonal maximum in AOD consistent with biogenic emissions
(implication: biogenic SOA).
Part of the motivation for SOAS field campaign (summer 2013)!
MISR: summer-winter AOD
IS THIS CONSISTENT WITH OUR UNDERSTANDING OF AEROSOL IN THE REGION?
NO! Model shows significantly less seasonal enhancement over SE. But note: (a) diversity of satellite observations (b) model reproduces surface PM2.5
Bonne Ford (CSU)
IS THERE SEASONALITY IN SURFACE OA IN THE SOUTHEAST?
NO. Seasonality in observed PM2.5 is largely driven by sulfate and dust. Consistent with Zhang et al. [2012] who suggest that seasonality is driven by meteorology,
transport and photochemistry.
* Assumed OM:OC=2 year-round
A ROLE FOR WATER UPTAKE?
Very modest seasonality in surface layer RH, translates to very little seasonality in mass extinction efficiency.
Not an artifact of the satellite overpass time (impact of water uptake on AOD is actually greater on 24-hr mean)
Average nephelometer data at IMPROVE SE sites (2009) Mean diurnal RH in the SE(2009)
A-train overpass
POSSIBLE MEANS OF RECONCILIATION: AEROSOL ALOFT
CALIOP profiles over 3 years (2007-2009) show a summertime enhancement aloft – could be associated with fine inorganic or organic aerosol. Need an aircraft to tell! SENEX!
Extinction [km-1]
JJA
[Ford and Heald, in prep]
CONCLUSIONS
• Models consistent with observed surface PM2.5 loading and seasonality in the SE US, but underestimate summertime AOD (and seasonality) by a factor of 2-3.
• Possibly resolved by aerosol aloft (suggested by CALIOP) aircraft observations during SOAS to solve the mystery!
• Models underestimate OA, but observations can narrow the range: suggest the “missing” source is “anthropogenic” and that additional sinks (fragmentation) may also be required.
• Oxygen content of aerosol is a useful constraint – suggests that aging mechanism required only in remote enviro.
• Pine beetle infestation in W North America estimated to be responsible for up to 40% increases in SOA.
• Required: better characterization of species-specific response
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