臭氧
大气化学
环境科学
环境化学
光化学
产品(数学)
大气科学
化学
气象学
有机化学
地理
地质学
几何学
数学
作者
Tianshu Chen,J. B. Gilman,Si‐Wan Kim,B. L. Lefer,R. A. Washenfelder,Cora J. Young,B. Rappenglueck,P. S. Stevens,P. R. Veres,Likun Xue,J. A. de Gouw
摘要
Abstract The dominant fraction of anthropogenic volatile organic compound (VOC) emissions shifted from transportation fuels to volatile chemical products (VCP) in Los Angeles (LA) in 2010. This shift in VOC composition raises the question about the importance of VCP emissions for ozone (O 3 ) formation. In this study, O 3 chemistry during the CalNex 2010 was modeled using the Master Chemical Mechanism (MCM) version 3.3.1 and a detailed representation of VCP emissions based on measurements combined with inventory estimates. The model calculations indicate that VCP emissions contributed to 23% of the mean daily maximum 8‐hr average O 3 (DMA8 O 3 ) during the O 3 episodes. The simulated OH reactivity, including the contribution from VCP emissions, aligns with observations. Additionally, this framework was employed using four lumped mechanisms with simplified representations of emissions and chemistry. RACM2‐VCP showed the closest agreement with MCM, with a slight 4% increase in average DMA8 O 3 (65 ± 13 ppb), whereas RACM2 (58 ± 13 ppb) and SAPRC07B (59 ± 14 ppb) exhibited slightly lower levels. CB6r2, however, recorded reduced concentrations (37 ± 10 ppb). Although emissions of O 3 precursors have declined in LA since 2010, O 3 levels have not decreased significantly. Model results ascribed this trend to the rapid reduction in NO X emissions. Moreover, given the impact of COVID‐19, an analysis of 2020 reveals a shift to a NO X ‐limited O 3 formation regime in LA, thereby diminishing the influence of VCPs. This study provides new insights into the impact of VCP emissions on O 3 pollution from an in‐depth photochemical perspective.
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