• Air chemistry data from South Korea fiel

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Tue Feb 15 21:30:40 2022
    Air chemistry data from South Korea field study puts models to the test


    Date:
    February 15, 2022
    Source:
    Penn State
    Summary:
    An international effort to measure air quality in South Korea, a
    region with complex sources of pollution, may provide new insights
    into the atmospheric chemistry that produces ozone pollution,
    according to a team of scientists.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    An international effort to measure air quality in South Korea, a region
    with complex sources of pollution, may provide new insights into the atmospheric chemistry that produces ozone pollution, according to a team
    of scientists.


    ========================================================================== "This study shows that observations of the hydroxyl radical -- OH --
    and hydroperoxyl radical -- HO2 provide valuable tests of the ability of
    our photochemical models to correctly represent atmospheric chemistry, especially in environments with high levels of pollution," said William
    H. Brune, distinguished professor of meteorology at Penn State.

    The hydroxyl radical initiates important chemical reactions throughout
    the atmosphere, including in the troposphere, the lowest region reaching
    to the Earth's surface, where its reactions clean the air but also lead
    to ozone pollution in cities, the scientists said.

    The team analyzed airborne measurements of the hydroxyl radical,
    hydroperoxyl radical and about a 100 other chemical species taken during flights over South Korea in 2016 as part of a joint field study between
    NASA and the Republic of Korea, called Korea-U.S. Air Quality (KORUS-AQ).

    The airborne measurements of the hydroxyl and hydroperoxyl radicals
    agreed with values produced by separate models running at NASA Langley
    Research Center and Penn State when the uncertainties in the measurements
    and models are considered, the researchers said.

    "One major finding is -- even in a complex environment like this -- we
    have a good handle on the basic chemistry in our models," Brune said. "We
    can really say this chemistry is correct within the uncertainties,
    and that tells us something about ozone production." Ozone forms when
    nitrogen oxides -- like from vehicle and power plant emissions -- and
    volatile organic compounds -- produced naturally by plants but also by
    solvents and other harsh human-made chemicals -- mix in the atmosphere
    in the presence of sunlight, the scientists said.



    ==========================================================================
    "But these elements can't do much themselves, they need something to
    make the chemistry active, and that is the hydroxyl radical," Brune
    said. "It drives the chemistry, kind of like a low-temperature version
    of the flame heating your house." While the hydroxyl radical measured
    during the flights generally agreed with the models, the scientists found
    less agreement when they looked at their measurements of the radical's reactivity, which is the sum of reactions between the hydroxyl radical
    and all chemical species.

    "It's really a key number because a very high hydroxyl radical reactivity
    means you're in a very polluted environment, or an environment that has a
    lot of things being emitted that are reacting with the hydroxyl radical,"
    Brune said.

    When the measured hydroxyl radical reactivity was compared to the hydroxyl radical reactivity calculated using all the other measurements, it was not possible to account for as much as half of the hydroxyl radical reactivity
    in some cases, said the scientists, who reported their findings in the
    journal Atmospheric Environment.

    This missing hydroxyl radical reactivity originated primarily from the
    Korean peninsula, potentially helping to distinguish the sources between pollution emitted by industry in South Korea and older pollution that
    blows in from China, the scientists said.



    ==========================================================================
    "We invented this idea of measuring hydroxyl radical reactivity about 25
    years ago and we've found missing reactivity in forests and all kinds of
    other places," Brune said. "And while we are now much better at closing
    the gap between measured and calculated hydroxyl radical reactivity,
    in South Korea we thought we were measuring everything, and we clearly
    weren't measuring everything." Improving our understanding of this
    reactive chemistry is important, Brune said, because that information
    can inform regional and global air quality models.

    "These models have a hard time predicting really harmful amounts of
    ozone," he said. "Hopefully our results will help them figure out the
    problem so that they can be used by policy makers to efficiently reduce
    ozone levels, not just in the U.S., but around the world." Other Penn
    State researchers on this project were David Miller, assistant research professor and Alexander Thames and Alexandra Brosius, graduate students.

    Scientists from the University of California, Irvine, NASA Langley
    Research Center, University of Colorado, Boulder, NASA Goddard Space
    Flight Center, Georgia Institute of Technology, California Institute of Technology, University of Virginia, University in Innsbruck and University
    of Oslo also participated.

    NASA provided funding for several researchers involved in the study.

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Penn_State. Original written by
    Matthew Carroll. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. William H. Brune, David O. Miller, Alexander B. Thames, Alexandra L.

    Brosius, Barbara Barletta, Donald R. Blake, Nicola J. Blake, Gao
    Chen, Yonghoon Choi, James H. Crawford, Joshua P. Digangi, Glenn
    Diskin, Alan Fried, Samuel R. Hall, Thomas F. Hanisco, Greg L. Huey,
    Stacey C. Hughes, Michelle Kim, Simone Meinardi, Denise D. Montzka,
    Sally E. Pusede, Jason R. Schroeder, Alex Teng, David J. Tanner,
    Kirk Ullmann, James Walega, Andrew Weinheimer, Armin Wisthaler,
    Paul O. Wennberg. Observations of atmospheric oxidation and ozone
    production in South Korea. Atmospheric Environment, 2022; 269:
    118854 DOI: 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2021.118854 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/02/220215125513.htm

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