European Facility For Airborne Research

European Facility For Airborne Research April 19, 2024, 14:07

Document

Description
Title Aerosol chemistry above an extended archipelago of the eastern Mediterranean basin during strong northern winds
Type Publication
Abstract:

Detailed aerosol chemical predictions by a comprehensive model system (i.e. PMCAMx, WRF, GEOS-CHEM), along with airborne and ground-based observations, are presented and analysed over a wide domain covering the Aegean Archipelago. The studied period is 10 successive days in 2011, characterized by strong northern winds, which is the most frequently prevailing synoptic pattern during summer. The submicron aerosol load in the lower troposphere above the archipelago is homogenously enriched in sulfate (average modelled and measured submicron sulfate of 5.5 and 5.8 μg m−3, respectively), followed by organics (2.3 and 4.4 μg m−3) and ammonium (1.5 and 1.7 μg m−3). Aerosol concentrations smoothly decline aloft, reaching lower values (< 1 μg m−3) above 4.2 km altitude. The evaluation criteria rate the model results for sulfate, ammonium, chloride, elemental carbon, organic carbon and total PM10 mass concentrations as "good", indicating a satisfactory representation of the aerosol chemistry and precursors. Higher model discrepancies are confined to the highest (e.g. peak sulfate values) and lowest ends (e.g. nitrate) of the airborne aerosol mass size distribution, as well as in airborne organic aerosol concentrations (model underestimation ca. 50 %). The latter is most likely related to the intense fire activity at the eastern Balkan area and the Black Sea coastline, which is not represented in the current model application. The investigation of the effect of local variables on model performance revealed that the best agreement between predictions and observations occurs during high winds from the northeast, as well as for the area confined above the archipelago and up to 2.2 km altitude. The atmospheric ageing of biogenic particles is suggested to be activated in the aerosol chemistry module, when treating organics in a sufficient nitrogen and sulfate-rich environment, such as that over the Aegean basin. More than 70 % of the predicted aerosol mass over the Aegean Archipelago during a representative Etesian episode is related to transport of aerosols and their precursors from outside the modelling domain.

Available from https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/15/8401/2015/
Author
ATHANASOPOULOU Eleni
BISKOS George
BOSSIOLI Elizabeth
COE Hugh
DANDOU Aggeliki
KALOGIROS John
MIHALOPOULOS Nikolaos
PROTONOTARIOU Anna
TOMBROU-TZELLA Maria
J. D. Allan, A. Bacak, J. Sciare
Reference
Journal Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Volume 15
Pages 8401-8421
Year 2015
Times cited 4
Institute country United Kingdom
Type of science
  • Aerosol chemistry and physics
Field of science
  • Troposphere
File details
Added Aug. 17, 2017, 11:29
Last update Nov. 20, 2023, 14:41
Size 6.4 MB
File name acp-15-8401-2015.pdf
Visibility Public - Available for any user
Links with specific subjects

Go to the document list

Back to top
Copyright © 2024 EUFAR All rights reserved.