GEM-MACH-PAH (rev2488): a new high-resolution chemical transport model for North American polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and benzene
<p>Environment and Climate Change Canada's online air quality forecasting model, GEM-MACH, was extended to simulate atmospheric concentrations of benzene and seven polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs): phenanthrene, anthracene, fluoranthene, pyrene, benz(a)anthracene, chrysene, and...
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Copernicus Publications
2018-07-01
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Series: | Geoscientific Model Development |
Online Access: | https://www.geosci-model-dev.net/11/2609/2018/gmd-11-2609-2018.pdf |
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record_format |
Article |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
C. H. Whaley C. H. Whaley E. Galarneau P. A. Makar A. Akingunola W. Gong S. Gravel M. D. Moran C. Stroud J. Zhang Q. Zheng |
spellingShingle |
C. H. Whaley C. H. Whaley E. Galarneau P. A. Makar A. Akingunola W. Gong S. Gravel M. D. Moran C. Stroud J. Zhang Q. Zheng GEM-MACH-PAH (rev2488): a new high-resolution chemical transport model for North American polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and benzene Geoscientific Model Development |
author_facet |
C. H. Whaley C. H. Whaley E. Galarneau P. A. Makar A. Akingunola W. Gong S. Gravel M. D. Moran C. Stroud J. Zhang Q. Zheng |
author_sort |
C. H. Whaley |
title |
GEM-MACH-PAH (rev2488): a new high-resolution chemical transport model for North American polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and benzene |
title_short |
GEM-MACH-PAH (rev2488): a new high-resolution chemical transport model for North American polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and benzene |
title_full |
GEM-MACH-PAH (rev2488): a new high-resolution chemical transport model for North American polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and benzene |
title_fullStr |
GEM-MACH-PAH (rev2488): a new high-resolution chemical transport model for North American polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and benzene |
title_full_unstemmed |
GEM-MACH-PAH (rev2488): a new high-resolution chemical transport model for North American polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and benzene |
title_sort |
gem-mach-pah (rev2488): a new high-resolution chemical transport model for north american polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and benzene |
publisher |
Copernicus Publications |
series |
Geoscientific Model Development |
issn |
1991-959X 1991-9603 |
publishDate |
2018-07-01 |
description |
<p>Environment and Climate Change Canada's online air quality
forecasting model, GEM-MACH, was extended to simulate atmospheric
concentrations of benzene and seven polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs):
phenanthrene, anthracene, fluoranthene, pyrene, benz(a)anthracene, chrysene,
and benzo(a)pyrene. In the expanded model, benzene and PAHs are emitted from
major point, area, and mobile sources, with emissions based on recent
emission factors. Modelled PAHs undergo gas–particle partitioning (whereas
benzene is only in the gas phase), atmospheric transport, oxidation, cloud
processing, and dry and wet deposition. To represent PAH gas–particle
partitioning, the Dachs–Eisenreich scheme was used, and we have improved
gas–particle partitioning parameters based on an empirical analysis to get
significantly better gas–particle partitioning results than the previous
North American PAH model, AURAMS-PAH. Added process parametrizations include
the particle phase benzo(a)pyrene reaction with ozone via the Kwamena scheme
and gas-phase scavenging of PAHs by snow via vapour sorption to the snow
surface.</p><p>The resulting GEM-MACH-PAH model was used to generate the first online model
simulations of PAH emissions, transport, chemical transformation,
and deposition for a high-resolution domain (2.5 km grid cell spacing) in North
America, centred on the PAH data-rich region of southern Ontario, Canada and
the northeastern US. Model output for two seasons was compared to
measurements from three monitoring networks spanning Canada and the US
Average spring–summertime model results were found to be statistically
unbiased from measurements of benzene and all seven PAHs. The same was true
for the fall–winter seasonal mean, except for benzo(a)pyrene, which had a
statistically significant positive bias. We present evidence that the
benzo(a)pyrene results may be ameliorated via further improvements to
particulate matter and oxidant processes and transport. Our analysis focused
on four key components to the prediction of atmospheric PAH levels: spatial
variability, sensitivity to mobile emissions, gas–particle partitioning, and
wet deposition. Spatial variability of PAHs ∕ PM<sub>2.5</sub> at a 2.5 km resolution
was found to be comparable to measurements. Predicted ambient surface
concentrations of benzene and the PAHs were found to be critically dependent
on mobile emission factors, indicating the mobile emissions sector has a
significant influence on ambient PAH levels in the study region. PAH wet
deposition was overestimated due to additive precipitation biases in the
model and the measurements. Our overall performance evaluation suggests that
GEM-MACH-PAH can provide seasonal estimates for benzene and PAHs and is
suitable for emissions scenario simulations.</p> |
url |
https://www.geosci-model-dev.net/11/2609/2018/gmd-11-2609-2018.pdf |
work_keys_str_mv |
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doaj-25d673ae8f1c41d1b9556b62ea8680422020-11-24T21:16:23ZengCopernicus PublicationsGeoscientific Model Development1991-959X1991-96032018-07-01112609263210.5194/gmd-11-2609-2018GEM-MACH-PAH (rev2488): a new high-resolution chemical transport model for North American polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and benzeneC. H. Whaley0C. H. Whaley1E. Galarneau2P. A. Makar3A. Akingunola4W. Gong5S. Gravel6M. D. Moran7C. Stroud8J. Zhang9Q. Zheng10Air Quality Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada, 4905 Dufferin Street, Toronto, ON, M3H 5T4, CanadaClimate Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada, 4905 Dufferin Street, Toronto, ON, M3H 5T4, CanadaAir Quality Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada, 4905 Dufferin Street, Toronto, ON, M3H 5T4, CanadaAir Quality Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada, 4905 Dufferin Street, Toronto, ON, M3H 5T4, CanadaAir Quality Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada, 4905 Dufferin Street, Toronto, ON, M3H 5T4, CanadaAir Quality Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada, 4905 Dufferin Street, Toronto, ON, M3H 5T4, CanadaAir Quality Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada, 4905 Dufferin Street, Toronto, ON, M3H 5T4, CanadaAir Quality Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada, 4905 Dufferin Street, Toronto, ON, M3H 5T4, CanadaAir Quality Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada, 4905 Dufferin Street, Toronto, ON, M3H 5T4, CanadaAir Quality Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada, 4905 Dufferin Street, Toronto, ON, M3H 5T4, CanadaAir Quality Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada, 4905 Dufferin Street, Toronto, ON, M3H 5T4, Canada<p>Environment and Climate Change Canada's online air quality forecasting model, GEM-MACH, was extended to simulate atmospheric concentrations of benzene and seven polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs): phenanthrene, anthracene, fluoranthene, pyrene, benz(a)anthracene, chrysene, and benzo(a)pyrene. In the expanded model, benzene and PAHs are emitted from major point, area, and mobile sources, with emissions based on recent emission factors. Modelled PAHs undergo gas–particle partitioning (whereas benzene is only in the gas phase), atmospheric transport, oxidation, cloud processing, and dry and wet deposition. To represent PAH gas–particle partitioning, the Dachs–Eisenreich scheme was used, and we have improved gas–particle partitioning parameters based on an empirical analysis to get significantly better gas–particle partitioning results than the previous North American PAH model, AURAMS-PAH. Added process parametrizations include the particle phase benzo(a)pyrene reaction with ozone via the Kwamena scheme and gas-phase scavenging of PAHs by snow via vapour sorption to the snow surface.</p><p>The resulting GEM-MACH-PAH model was used to generate the first online model simulations of PAH emissions, transport, chemical transformation, and deposition for a high-resolution domain (2.5 km grid cell spacing) in North America, centred on the PAH data-rich region of southern Ontario, Canada and the northeastern US. Model output for two seasons was compared to measurements from three monitoring networks spanning Canada and the US Average spring–summertime model results were found to be statistically unbiased from measurements of benzene and all seven PAHs. The same was true for the fall–winter seasonal mean, except for benzo(a)pyrene, which had a statistically significant positive bias. We present evidence that the benzo(a)pyrene results may be ameliorated via further improvements to particulate matter and oxidant processes and transport. Our analysis focused on four key components to the prediction of atmospheric PAH levels: spatial variability, sensitivity to mobile emissions, gas–particle partitioning, and wet deposition. Spatial variability of PAHs ∕ PM<sub>2.5</sub> at a 2.5 km resolution was found to be comparable to measurements. Predicted ambient surface concentrations of benzene and the PAHs were found to be critically dependent on mobile emission factors, indicating the mobile emissions sector has a significant influence on ambient PAH levels in the study region. PAH wet deposition was overestimated due to additive precipitation biases in the model and the measurements. Our overall performance evaluation suggests that GEM-MACH-PAH can provide seasonal estimates for benzene and PAHs and is suitable for emissions scenario simulations.</p>https://www.geosci-model-dev.net/11/2609/2018/gmd-11-2609-2018.pdf |