Detection of anthropogenic formaldehyde over North America by oversampling of OMI data: Implications...

download Detection of anthropogenic formaldehyde over North America by oversampling of OMI data: Implications for TEMPO Lei Zhu and Daniel J. Jacob.

If you can't read please download the document

Transcript of Detection of anthropogenic formaldehyde over North America by oversampling of OMI data: Implications...

  • Slide 1
  • Detection of anthropogenic formaldehyde over North America by oversampling of OMI data: Implications for TEMPO Lei Zhu and Daniel J. Jacob
  • Slide 2
  • HCHO observations from space constrain emissions of highly reactive volatile organic compounds (HRVOCs) HRVOCsHCHO h, OH oxidation ~ 2 hours and funding from NASA ACMAP OMI HCHO columns Jan 2006Jul 2006 T.P. Kurosu anthropogenic biogenic pyrogenic < 1 day
  • Slide 3
  • Nigerian air pollution revealed by satellite OMI formaldehyde 2005-2009 MISR SCIA aerosol (AOD) NO 2 HCHO glyoxal methane Population: 170 million (+3% a -1 ) GDP: $270 billion (+7% a -1 ) oil! Most natural gas is flared >80% of domestic energy from biofuel, waste Lagos Port Harcourt An unusual mix of very high VOCs, low NO x What will happen as infrastructure develops? Marais et al., 2014 gas flaring! 10 15 molecules cm -2 TES 825 hPa ozone DJF
  • Slide 4
  • Detection of anthropogenic HRVOCs from HCHO over US has been elusive: elevated HCHO is mainly from isoprene Millet et al. [2008] OMI satellite observations of formaldehyde (HCHO) columns, Jun-Aug 2006 HCHO h, OH 2 hours oxidation isoprene 1 hour
  • Slide 5
  • Using non-growing season to avoid isoprene interference doesnt work HCHO observations are then below detection limit Detection limit (for 1-month average) HCHO detection in winter hampered by low sun angles low PBL heights slow chemistry GOME data [Abbot et al., 2003]
  • Slide 6
  • Problem is that US urban/industrial plumes are small and localized OMI monthly detection limit of 5x10 15 molecules cm -2 1 ppb HCHO in 2 km PBL HCHO ~ 10 ppb observed in cores of urban/industrial plumes but not on scale of OMI pixels (13x24 km 2 nadir) Day 1 Day 2 Day 3 Solve problem by oversampling: achieve spatial resolution finer than pixel size by temporal averaging Apply to OMI HCHO May-Aug 2005-2008 retrieval on 2x2 km 2 grid, 24 km smoothing
  • Slide 7
  • Oversampled OMI HCHO over eastern Texas (May-Aug 2005-2008) Isoprene in green Large AHRVOC point sources in black vegetation prevailing wind
  • Slide 8
  • Lack of temperature dependence of HCHO in Houston urban core supports anthropogenic attribution exp[0.11T]
  • Slide 9
  • Using OMI HCHO to quantify Houston AHRVOC emissions HCHO source = HCHO column o = background column = 260 110 kmol h -1 Consistent with S = 240 90 kmol h -1 from TEXAQS [Parrish et al., 2012] SpeciesEmission kmol h -1 HCHO source kmol h -1 ethene1627 propene6.312 HCHO9.4 CH 3 CHO1.2 TOTAL3349 Compare to EPA AHRVOC inventory (NEI 05) EPA inventory is factor of 5.5 2.4 too low Integrate HCHO enhancement over area of Houston plume Background o
  • Slide 10
  • Implications for TEMPO TEMPO should perform much better than OMI in detecting AHRVOC emissions Detecting AHRVOC emissions from oil/gas fields is of particular interest; OMI is marginal, TEMPO has promise. Staggering TEMPO pixels from day to day would allow oversampling but that does not seem necessary Observed diurnal variation of urban/industrial plumes will constrain primary vs. secondary HCHO sources InstrumentPixel resolutionHCHO detection limit (single retrieval) OMI13x24 km 2 2x10 16 molecules cm -2 TEMPO2x4.5 km 2 1x10 16 molecules cm -2