Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4443808 Atmospheric Environment 2006 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

The vertical pollutant dispersion is quite sensitive to the eddy diffusivity, KVKV. Therefore, good estimations of KVKV are essential for improving the predictive performance of Eulerian dispersion models; especially in urban areas where literature based KVKV correlations are not always accurate. Here, we present a methodology to obtain a more accurate, but site-specific, KVKV correlation. It is based on using artificial neural networks (ANN) to find the best KVKV function for a particular urban area by minimizing, in a least-squares sense, the difference between ambient measurements of carbon monoxide and dispersion simulations of this tracer species. The resulting ANN-KV correlation is a function of three parameters namely, the stability parameter (z/Lz/L), the height within the mixing layer (z/hz/h), and the scaled height (zfC/u*zfC/u*)–hence the Monin–Obukhov (LL), mixing (hh) and Ekman (u*/fCu*/fC) lengths are used to predict KVKV across the atmospheric boundary layer.We then assess how such an ANN-KV model improves the capability of a dispersion model (CAMx) to predict peak concentrations of ambient carbon monoxide in a large city. The evaluation has been performed with a set of eight air-quality meteorological stations evenly spread across the city of Santiago, Chile, during springtime. Results show that with the ANN-KV model, CAMx achieved better predictions of peak CO concentration levels than has been hitherto possible. Typically root-mean-square errors are reduced to half their original values. The resulting ANN-KV model—without any additional training—was then used to predict CO ambient concentrations at another period (summertime) and also to predict ambient concentrations of total carbon (PM2.5) at both periods. A much-improved agreement was observed. Furthermore, the ANN formulation allowed for the quality of the urban emission inventory to be critically assessed indicating that the weekend emissions in Santiago are most likely underestimated.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Atmospheric Science
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