Health & Environmental Research Online (HERO)


Print Feedback Export to File
2270262 
Journal Article 
Analyzing experimental data and model parameters: implications for predictions of SOA using chemical transport models 
Barsanti, KC; Carlton, AG; Chung, SH 
2013 
Yes 
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
ISSN: 1680-7316
EISSN: 1680-7324 
COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH 
GOTTINGEN 
13 
23 
12073-12088 
English 
Despite critical importance for air quality and climate predictions, accurate representation of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation remains elusive. An essential addition to the ongoing discussion of improving model predictions is an acknowledgement of the linkages between experimental conditions, parameter optimization and model output, as well as the linkage between empirically-derived partitioning parameters and the physicochemical properties of SOA they represent in models. In this work, a "best available" set of SOA modeling parameters is selected by comparing predicted SOA yields and mass concentrations with observed yields and mass concentrations from a comprehensive list of published smog chamber studies. Evaluated SOA model parameters include existing parameters for two product (2p) and volatility basis set (VBS) modeling frameworks, and new 2p-VBS parameters; 2p-VBS parameters are developed to exploit advantages of the VBS approach within the computationally-economical and widely-used 2p framework. Fine particulate matter (PM2.5) and SOA mass concentrations are simulated for the continental United States using CMAQv.4.7.1; results are compared for a base case (with default CMAQ parameters) and two best available parameter cases to illustrate the high-and low-NOx limits of biogenic SOA formation from monoterpenes. Results are discussed in terms of implications for current chemical transport model simulations and recommendations are provided for future modeling and measurement efforts. The comparisons of SOA yield predictions with data from 22 published chamber studies illustrate that: (1) SOA yields for naphthalene, and cyclic and >C5 straight-chain/branched alkanes are not well represented using either the newly developed or existing parameters for low-yield aromatics and lumped alkanes, respectively; and (2) for four of seven volatile organic compound+oxidant systems, the 2p-VBS parameters better represent chamber data than do the default CMAQ v.4.7.1 parameters. Using the "best available" parameters (combination of published 2p and newly derived 2p-VBS), predicted SOA mass and PM2.5 concentrations increase by up to 15 % and 7 %, respectively, for the high-NOx case and up to 215 % (similar to 3 mu gm(-3)) and 55 %, respectively, for the low-NOx case. Percent bias between model-based and observationally-based secondary organic carbon (SOC) improved from -63 % for the base case to -15 % for the low-NOx case. The ability to robustly assign "best available" parameters in all volatile organic compound+oxidant systems, however, is critically limited due to insufficient data; particularly for photo-oxidation of diverse monoterpenes, sesquiterpenes, and alkanes under a range of atmospherically relevant conditions. 
• ISA-Ozone (2020 Final Project Page)
     Literature Search Results
     Literature Search - Included
          Citation Mapping
               Climate
     Title-Abstract Screening (SWIFT-AS) - Excluded
          SWIFT-AS Excluded
• ISA-PM (2019)
     Considered
     1st Draft
          Chapter 3
     In Scope
          Atmospheric Science
     Final ISA
          Chapter 3
• LitSearch-NOx (2024)
     Forward Citation Search
          Exposure
               Results
                    Error Sources
                         WoS
     Keyword Search
          Exposure
               March 2014-November 2016