Development and application of a reactive plume-in-grid model: evaluation over Greater Paris

Emissions from major point sources are badly represented by classical Eulerian models. An overestimation of the horizontal plume dilution, a bad representation of the vertical diffusion as well as an incorrect estimate of the chemical reaction rates are the main limitations of such models in the vic...

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Main Authors: I. Korsakissok, V. Mallet
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2010-09-01
Series:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Online Access:http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/10/8917/2010/acp-10-8917-2010.pdf
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spelling doaj-715c76dbe14a41be90705b9457968cc02020-11-24T23:02:33ZengCopernicus PublicationsAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics1680-73161680-73242010-09-0110188917893110.5194/acp-10-8917-2010Development and application of a reactive plume-in-grid model: evaluation over Greater ParisI. KorsakissokV. MalletEmissions from major point sources are badly represented by classical Eulerian models. An overestimation of the horizontal plume dilution, a bad representation of the vertical diffusion as well as an incorrect estimate of the chemical reaction rates are the main limitations of such models in the vicinity of major point sources. The plume-in-grid method is a multiscale modeling technique that couples a local-scale Gaussian puff model with an Eulerian model in order to better represent these emissions. We present the plume-in-grid model developed in the air quality modeling system Polyphemus, with full gaseous chemistry. The model is evaluated on the metropolitan Île-de-France region, during six months (summer 2001). The subgrid-scale treatment is used for 89 major point sources, a selection based on the emission rates of NO<sub>x</sub> and SO<sub>2</sub>. Results with and without the subgrid treatment of point emissions are compared, and their performance by comparison to the observations on measurement stations is assessed. A sensitivity study is also carried out, on several local-scale parameters as well as on the vertical diffusion within the urban area. <br><br> Primary pollutants are shown to be the most impacted by the plume-in-grid treatment. SO<sub>2</sub> is the most impacted pollutant, since the point sources account for an important part of the total SO<sub>2</sub> emissions, whereas NO<sub>x</sub> emissions are mostly due to traffic. The spatial impact of the subgrid treatment is localized in the vicinity of the sources, especially for reactive species (NO<sub>x</sub> and O<sub>3</sub>). Ozone is mostly sensitive to the time step between two puff emissions which influences the in-plume chemical reactions, whereas the almost-passive species SO<sub>2</sub> is more sensitive to the injection time, which determines the duration of the subgrid-scale treatment. <br><br> Future developments include an extension to handle aerosol chemistry, and an application to the modeling of line sources in order to use the subgrid treatment with road emissions. The latter is expected to lead to more striking results, due to the importance of traffic emissions for the pollutants of interest. http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/10/8917/2010/acp-10-8917-2010.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author I. Korsakissok
V. Mallet
spellingShingle I. Korsakissok
V. Mallet
Development and application of a reactive plume-in-grid model: evaluation over Greater Paris
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
author_facet I. Korsakissok
V. Mallet
author_sort I. Korsakissok
title Development and application of a reactive plume-in-grid model: evaluation over Greater Paris
title_short Development and application of a reactive plume-in-grid model: evaluation over Greater Paris
title_full Development and application of a reactive plume-in-grid model: evaluation over Greater Paris
title_fullStr Development and application of a reactive plume-in-grid model: evaluation over Greater Paris
title_full_unstemmed Development and application of a reactive plume-in-grid model: evaluation over Greater Paris
title_sort development and application of a reactive plume-in-grid model: evaluation over greater paris
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
issn 1680-7316
1680-7324
publishDate 2010-09-01
description Emissions from major point sources are badly represented by classical Eulerian models. An overestimation of the horizontal plume dilution, a bad representation of the vertical diffusion as well as an incorrect estimate of the chemical reaction rates are the main limitations of such models in the vicinity of major point sources. The plume-in-grid method is a multiscale modeling technique that couples a local-scale Gaussian puff model with an Eulerian model in order to better represent these emissions. We present the plume-in-grid model developed in the air quality modeling system Polyphemus, with full gaseous chemistry. The model is evaluated on the metropolitan Île-de-France region, during six months (summer 2001). The subgrid-scale treatment is used for 89 major point sources, a selection based on the emission rates of NO<sub>x</sub> and SO<sub>2</sub>. Results with and without the subgrid treatment of point emissions are compared, and their performance by comparison to the observations on measurement stations is assessed. A sensitivity study is also carried out, on several local-scale parameters as well as on the vertical diffusion within the urban area. <br><br> Primary pollutants are shown to be the most impacted by the plume-in-grid treatment. SO<sub>2</sub> is the most impacted pollutant, since the point sources account for an important part of the total SO<sub>2</sub> emissions, whereas NO<sub>x</sub> emissions are mostly due to traffic. The spatial impact of the subgrid treatment is localized in the vicinity of the sources, especially for reactive species (NO<sub>x</sub> and O<sub>3</sub>). Ozone is mostly sensitive to the time step between two puff emissions which influences the in-plume chemical reactions, whereas the almost-passive species SO<sub>2</sub> is more sensitive to the injection time, which determines the duration of the subgrid-scale treatment. <br><br> Future developments include an extension to handle aerosol chemistry, and an application to the modeling of line sources in order to use the subgrid treatment with road emissions. The latter is expected to lead to more striking results, due to the importance of traffic emissions for the pollutants of interest.
url http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/10/8917/2010/acp-10-8917-2010.pdf
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