Rebecca Buchholz

and 9 more

Fire emissions are an important component of global models, which help to understand the influence of sources, transport and chemistry on atmospheric composition. Global fire emission inventories can vary substantially due to the assumptions made in the emission creation process, including the defined vegetation type, fire detection, fuel loading, fraction of vegetation burned and emissions factors. Here, we focus on the uncertainty in emission factors and the resulting impact on modeled composition. Our study uses the Community Atmosphere Model with chemistry (CAM-chem) to model atmospheric composition for 2014, a year chosen for the relatively quiet El Niño Southern Oscillation activity. We focus on carbon monoxide (CO), a trace gas emitted from incomplete combustion and also produced from secondary oxidation of volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Fire is a major source of atmospheric CO and VOCs. Modeled CO from four fire emission inventories (CMIP6/GFED4s, QFED2.5, GFAS1.2 and FINN1.5) are compared after being implemented in CAM-chem. Multiple sensitivity tests are performed based on CO and VOC emission factor uncertainties. We compare model output in the 14 basis regions defined by the Global Fire Emissions Database (GFED) team and evaluate against CO observations from the Measurements of Pollution in the Troposphere (MOPITT) satellite-based instrument. For some regions, emission factor uncertainty spans the results found by using different inventories. Finally, we use modeled ozone (O3) to briefly investigate how emission factor uncertainty influences the atmospheric oxidative environment. Overall, accounting for emission factor uncertainty when modeling atmospheric chemistry can lend a range of uncertainty to simulated results.

Rebecca Buchholz

and 5 more

Fire emissions are a major contributor to atmospheric composition, affecting atmospheric oxidizing capacity and air quality. Transported amounts from Northern Hemisphere boreal fires can reach the pristine Arctic atmosphere as well as impact air quality in populated regions. Carbon monoxide (CO) is a useful trace gas emitted from fires that can be used to link extreme fire events with climate variability. We use our recently developed statistical tool to investigate the climate drivers of satellite measured CO variability in two Northern Hemisphere boreal fire regions: northwest Canada and Siberia. Our focus is on quantifying the ability of climate mode indices for the Pacific, Atlantic, Indian and Arctic Oceans in predicting CO amounts in these regions. Climate mode indices El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO), Tropical North Atlantic (TNA), the Dipole Mode Index (DMI) and the Arctic Oscillation (AO) are used to develop statistical models of column CO interannual variability from the Measurements of Pollution In The Troposphere (MOPITT) satellite instrument, for the time period covering 2001-2017. In addition, we assess the ability of fire emission inventories to reproduce CO, including the Fire Inventory from NCAR (FINN), the NASA Quick Fire Emissions Dataset (QFED) and the Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS) Global Fire Assimilation System (GFAS). These are implemented in the NCAR Community Atmosphere Model with chemistry (CAM-chem) and subsequently evaluated against MOPITT CO observations. Emission uncertainty contribution to inter-inventory differences are quantified, and the modeled contribution of fires to CO interannual variability is determined.

Guang Zeng

and 20 more

We quantify the impacts of halogenated ozone-depleting substances (ODSs), methane, N2O, CO2, and short-lived ozone precursors on total and partial ozone column changes between 1850 and 2014 using CMIP6 Aerosol and Chemistry Model Intercomparison Project (AerChemMIP) simulations. We find that whilst substantial ODS-induced ozone loss dominates the stratospheric ozone changes since the 1970s, the increases in short-lived ozone precursors and methane lead to increases in tropospheric ozone since the 1950s that make increasingly important contributions to total column ozone (TCO) changes. Our results show that methane impacts stratospheric ozone changes through its reaction with atomic chlorine leading to ozone increases, but this impact will decrease with declining ODSs. The N2O increases mainly impact ozone through NOx-induced ozone destruction in the stratosphere, having an overall small negative impact on TCO. CO2 increases lead to increased global stratospheric ozone due to stratospheric cooling. However, importantly CO2 increases cause TCO to decrease in the tropics. Large interannual variability obscures the responses of stratospheric ozone to N2O and CO2 changes. Substantial inter-model differences originate in the models’ representations of ODS-induced ozone depletion. We find that, although the tropospheric ozone trend is driven by the increase in its precursors, the stratospheric changes significantly impact the upper tropospheric ozone trend through modified stratospheric circulation and stratospheric ozone depletion. The speed-up of stratospheric overturning (i.e. decreasing age of air) is driven mainly by ODS and CO2; increases. Changes in methane and ozone precursors also modulate the cross-tropopause ozone flux.

Shaddy Ahmed

and 15 more

Reactive chlorine and bromine species emitted from snow and aerosols can significantly alter the oxidative capacity of the polar boundary layer. However, halogen production mechanisms from snow remain highly uncertain, making it difficult for most models to include descriptions of halogen snow emissions and to understand the impact on atmospheric chemistry. We investigate the influence of Arctic halogen emissions from snow on boundary layer oxidation processes using a one-dimensional atmospheric chemistry and transport model (PACT-1D). To understand the combined impact of snow emissions and boundary layer dynamics on atmospheric chemistry, we model \ch{Cl2} and \ch{Br2} primary emissions from snow and include heterogeneous recycling of halogens on both snow and aerosols. We focus on a two-day case study from the 2009 Ocean-Atmosphere-Sea Ice-Snowpack (OASIS) campaign at Utqia\.gvik, Alaska. The model reproduces both the diurnal cycle and high quantity of \ch{Cl2} observed, along with the measured concentrations of \ch{Br2}, \ch{BrO}, and \ch{HOBr}. Due to the combined effects of emissions, recycling, vertical mixing, and atmospheric chemistry, reactive chlorine is confined to the lowest 15 m of the atmosphere, while bromine impacts chemistry up to the boundary layer height. Upon including halogen emissions and recycling, the concentration of \ch{HO_x} (\ch{HO_x} = \ch{OH}+\ch{HO2}) at the surface increases by as much as a factor of 30 at mid-day. The change in \ch{HO_x} due to halogen chemistry, as well as chlorine atoms derived from snow emissions, significantly reduce volatile organic compound (VOC) lifetimes within a shallow layer near the surface.

Mingxuan Wu

and 16 more

Nitrate aerosol plays an important role in affecting regional air quality as well as Earth’s climate. However, it is not well represented or even neglected in many global climate models. In this study, we couple the Model for Simulating Aerosol Interactions and Chemistry (MOSAIC) module with the four-mode version of the Modal Aerosol Module (MAM4) in DOE’s Energy Exascale Earth System Model version 2 (E3SMv2) to treat nitrate aerosol and its radiative effects. We find that nitrate aerosol simulated by E3SMv2-MAM4-MOSAIC is sensitive to the treatment of gaseous HNO3 transfer to/from interstitial particles related to accommodation coefficients of HNO3 (αHNO3) on dust and non-dust particles. We compare three different treatments of HNO3 transfer: 1) a treatment (MTC_SLOW) that uses a low αHNO3 in the mass transfer coefficient (MTC) calculation; 2) a dust-weighted MTC treatment (MTC_WGT) that uses a high αHNO3 on non-dust particles; and 3) a dust-weighted MTC treatment that also splits coarse mode aerosols into the coarse dust and sea salt sub-modes in MOSAIC (MTC_SPLC). MTC_WGT and MTC_SPLC increase the global annual mean (2005-2014) nitrate burden from 0.096 (MTC_SLOW) to 0.237 and 0.185 Tg N, respectively, mostly in the coarse mode. They also produce stronger nitrate direct radiative forcing (–0.048 and –0.051 W m–2, respectively) and indirect forcing (–0.33 and –0.35 W m–2, respectively) than MTC_SLOW (–0.021 and –0.24 W m–2). All three treatments overestimate nitrate surface concentrations compared with ground-based observations. MTC_WGT and MTC_SPLC improve the vertical profiles of nitrate concentrations against aircraft measurements below 400 hPa.

Rebecca Buchholz

and 9 more