Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6307197 | Chemosphere | 2016 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Ozone production efficiency (OPE) of ship plume was first evaluated in this study, based on ship-plume photochemical/dynamic model simulations and the ship-plume composition data measured during the ITCT 2K2 (Intercontinental Transport and Chemical Transformation 2002) aircraft campaign. The averaged instantaneous OPEs (OPEiâ¾) estimated via the ship-plume photochemical/dynamic modeling for the ITCT 2K2 ship-plume ranged between 4.61 and 18.92, showing that the values vary with the extent of chemical evolution (or chemical stage) of the ship plume and the stability classes of the marine boundary layer (MBL). Together with OPEiâ¾, the equivalent OPEs (OPEeâ¾) for the entire ITCT 2K2 ship-plume were also estimated. The OPEeâ¾ values varied between 9.73 (for the stable MBL) and 12.73 (for the moderately stable MBL), which agreed well with the OPEeâ¾ of 12.85 estimated based on the ITCT 2K2 ship-plume observations. It was also found that both the model-simulated and observation-based OPEeâ¾ inside the ship-plume were 0.29-0.38 times smaller than the OPEeâ¾ calculated/measured outside the ITCT 2K2 ship-plume. Such low OPEs insides the ship plume were due to the high levels of NO and non-liner ship-plume photochemistry. Possible implications of this ship-plume OPE study in the global chemistry-transport modeling are also discussed.
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Environmental Chemistry
Authors
Hyun S. Kim, Yong H. Kim, Kyung M. Han, Jhoon Kim, Chul H. Song,