Title: Comprehensive Particulate Matter Modeling: A One Atmosphere Approach
1Forecasting the Impacts of Wildland Fires
Yongtao Hu1, William Jackson2, M. Talat Odman1
and Armistead G. Russell1 1School of Civil and
Environmental Engineering, Georgia Institute of
Technology, Atlanta, Georgia 2USDA Forest
Service, Asheville, North Carolina
Presented at the 6th Annual CMAS Conference,
October 2nd, 2007
2Wild land Fires and Air Quality
3Hi-Res Air Quality Forecasting SystemServing
Metro-Atlanta Area since 2006
4Hi-Res Modeling Domains
4-km
12-km
36-km
5Hi-Res Cycle
What could be done?
- Hi-Res cycle allows sufficient time for extra
efforts.
- For prescribed burning, the air quality forecast
ahead of the actual igniting would help plan and
conduct burns. - For existing/ongoing wildfires, the air quality
forecast would warn people to avoid unhealthy air
exposures at the following days.
6Estimate Emissions of Potential Fires
- Using models the Fire Emission Production
Simulator (FEPS) and the Consume 3.0
(http//www.fs.fed.us/pnw/fera/research/smoke/cons
ume/index.shtml ) - Prescribed fire collect pre-burning information
from the burning plans prepared in advance. - acreage of planned burning area, approximate
locations, fuel load descriptions, igniting
method and operation schedules - Existing/ongoing wild fire determine the most
likely fire locations on the following days
according to the analysis of forecast
meteorological conditions combined with the
information on previous days burning locations. - Then collect and estimate other fire information
approximate acreage of burning area, fuel
consumption and expected fire temperatures - Allocate estimated potential fire emissions to
the corresponding Hi-Res grid cells according to
the geographical information.
7Wild-Land-Impacts on Air Quality
- One way to calculate the air quality impacts of a
fire is to run two simulations - Run (1) typical emissions default in Hi-Res
- Run (2) estimated potential fire emissions
added in - and to take their difference
- Impact Air Quality (2) Air Quality (1).
-
- A more efficient way is to estimate the
contribution of the fires by calculating
emission sensitivities with the Decoupled Direct
Method (DDM) provided by the Hi-Res system. - Requires a single model run with potential fire
emissions added in.
8Application to prescribed fire forecast and
hindcast the February 28th, 2007 episode
- Forecast to test the predictive capability of
this system. - Forecast meteorology
- Emissions estimated from pre-burning information
- Hindcast to identify key weaknesses in the
system. - Re-analysis data (through FDDA) to predict the
meteorology - Post-burning information to estimate emissions
9Smoke Detected by Geostationary
Satellite(115-145 pm EST on February 28th,
2007 )
10Ambient Monitoring and Prescribed Burning Sites
11Hourly PM2.5 Mass
12Hourly Ozone Concentrations
13PM Impact of the Oconee NF and Piedmont NWR Fires
14Observed and Predicted Max. Concentration and
Predicted Max. Impact from the Fires within
Atlanta Urban Area
- Sensitivity analysis has shown that observed
ozone peaks can only be reached at 5 times
typical biogenic VOC emissions from burning
areas. Bursts of fire-induced isoprenoid
(isoprene and monoterpenes) emissions are
reported in the literature.
15Organic Matter to PM2.5 Ratios
- Increased VOC emissions also make up part of
missing secondary organic aerosol (SOA).
Evaporation and re-condensation of leaf surface
wax may be another source of SOA as suggested by
GC/MS analysis. Also background primary OM from
other fires missing in the typical inventory.
161-hr Exposures to Ambient PM2.5
17Forecast, Hindcast and Observed Plumes
18Application to wild fires the May 18th-23th,
2007 episode of Georgia-Florida wildfires
MODIS aerosol optical depth (AOD) on May 21st (L)
and 22nd (R), 2007
Observed Hourly PM2.5
G-F fires plume reached Atlanta after long-range
transport through Alabama under easterly winds on
21st that turned to westerly on 22nd.
19Wildfire Impacts on Hourly PM25
Simulated period May 18 23, 2007 Preliminary
Results on May 22
- Possible reasons could be the absence of the
surface thermal changes induced by the fire from
the meteorological model and the coarse vertical
resolution in CMAQ above 1-km from the ground.
20Summary
- We have developed and tested a modeling system to
forecast wildland-fire-impacts on air quality in
Atlanta, Georgia. - The application to forecast the prescribed fires
on February 28, 2007 was successful and indicates
that the fires could be reasonably well estimated
using the system. The forecast predictions are
in good agreement with observations, though the
hindcast improves significantly on timing and
location. - More efforts are needed to improve the capability
of the system to simulate wildfires.