Title of article :
Measurement and modelling of air pollution and atmospheric
chemistry in the U.K. West Midlands conurbation: Overview of the
PUMA Consortium project
Author/Authors :
Juan Antonio Baeza، نويسنده , , Fco. Javier Guille´n a، نويسنده , , Alejandro Salas a، نويسنده , , Jose´ Luis Manjo´n b، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
The PUMA (Pollution of the Urban Midlands Atmosphere) Consortium project involved intensive measurement campaigns in
the Summer of 1999 and Winter of 1999/2000, respectively, in which a wide variety of air pollutants were measured in the UK
West Midlands conurbation including detailed speciation of VOCs and major component analysis of aerosol. Measurements of the
OH and HO2 free radicals by the FAGE technique demonstrated that winter concentrations of OH were approximately half of those
measured during the summer despite a factor of 15 reduction in production through the photolysis of ozone. Detailed box
modelling of the fast reaction chemistry revealed the decomposition of Criegee intermediates formed from ozone–alkene reactions
to be responsible for the majority of the formation of hydroxyl in both the summer and winter campaigns, in contrast to earlier rural
measurements in which ozone photolysis was predominant. The main sinks for hydroxyl are reactions with NO2, alkenes and
oxygenates. Concentrations of the more stable hydrocarbons were found to be relatively invariant across the conurbation, but the
impacts of photochemistry were evident through analyses of formaldehyde which showed the majority to be photochemical in
origin as opposed to emitted from road traffic. Measurements on the upwind and downwind boundaries of the conurbation revealed
substantial enhancements in NOx as a result of emissions within the conurbation, especially during westerly winds which carried
relatively clean air. Using calcium as a tracer for crustal particles, it proved possible to reconstruct aerosol mass from the major
chemical components with a fairly high degree of success. The organic to elemental carbon ratios showed a far greater influence of
photochemistry in summer than winter, presumably resulting mainly from the greater availability of biogenic precursors during the
summer campaign. Two urban airshed models were developed and applied to the conurbation, one Eulerian, the other Lagrangian.Both were able to give a good simulation of concentrations of both primary and secondary pollutants at urban background
locations.
Keywords :
URGENT , Hydroxyl radical , Photochemistry , Air qualitymodel , Aerosol mass closure , Aldehydes , Elemental carbon , PUMA , urban atmosphere , organic carbon
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment