Title: Comprehensive Particulate Matter Modeling: A One Atmosphere Approach
1GEOS-CHEM Modeling for Boundary Conditions and
Natural Background
James W. Boylan Georgia Department of Natural
Resources - VISTAS National RPO Modeling
Meeting Denver, CO May 25, 2004
2Outline
- Objectives and Background
- Summary of Modeling Results
- Update on RPO GEOS-CHEM Project
- Natural Background Options
- Group Discussion
3Objectives
- Run the GEOS-CHEM global chemical transport model
for CY2002 to develop temporally and spatially
varying boundary conditions (BCs) for the 36-km
national modeling grid to be used for ozone,
PM2.5, and regional haze modeling. - Run GEOS-CHEM to evaluate natural background
visibility and transboundary pollutant transport.
4GEOS-CHEM Global Chemical Transport Model
- Driven by Goddard Earth Observing System (GEOS)
assimilated meteorological data from the NASA
Data Assimilation Office (DAO) - Horizontal resolution 1o x 1o to 4o x 5o
(user-selected), 48 levels in vertical
(80 km) - Ozone-NOx-VOC (oxidant) chemistry 80 species,
400 reactions - Aerosols H2SO4-HNO3-NH3, organic carbon (OC),
elemental carbon (EC), soil dust (four size
classes), sea salt (two size classes) - Oxidant and aerosol simulations coupled by
photolysis frequencies, heterogeneous chemistry,
sulfate/nitrate formation, HNO3(g)/NO3-
partitioning - Multi-process wet deposition scheme
- http//www-as.harvard.edu/chemistry/trop/geos
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73-Hourly GEOS-CHEM Sulfate BCs
EPA Default
8SO4 Seasonal Boundary Condition Time Series
Summer
9PM diff. (GCM BCs/ICs Default BCs/ICs)
D PM 2.5 D PM Sulfate
(July monthly avg., 2001)
Slide provided by Carey Jang, U.S. EPA
10PM diff. (GCM BCs/ICs Default BCs/ICs)
D PM 2.5 D PM Sulfate
(July 22, 2001, daily average)
Slide provided by Carey Jang, U.S. EPA
11PM diff. (GCM BCs/ICs Default BCs/ICs)
D PM 2.5 D PM Nitrate
(January monthly avg., 2001)
Slide provided by Carey Jang, U.S. EPA
12PM diff. (GCM BCs/ICs Default BCs/ICs)
D PM 2.5 D PM Nitrate
(Jan. 13, 2001, daily average)
Slide provided by Carey Jang, U.S. EPA
13January 2002 EpisodeGEOS-CHEM (S) vs. EPA-Default
CASTNET TNO3 (VISTAS) CASTNET TNO3 (US)
14Summary of Results
- Summer Episodes
- Significant change in ozone in WRAP, MRPO, and
MANE-VU - Significant change in PM2.5 (sulfate) in WRAP
- Winter Episodes
- Significant change in PM2.5 (nitrate) in MRPO,
MANE-VU, and VISTAS related to ozone or
reactive nitrogen BCs (?) - Ozone performance worse (low bias) BC low in
north - NO2, NO3, and TNO3 performance better
- Mexican Fires
- Significant change in PM2.5 (OC EC) in CENRAP,
WRAP, VISTAS, and MANE-VU
15Comparison of Wind Fields
GEOSCHEM DAO
GEOSCHEN Westerly (inflow) MM5 Northerly
(outflow)
16GEOSCHEM Easterly and northerly MM5 Clock
wise rotation motion
17Linking GEOS-CHEM and CMAQ
- Possible inconsistencies between the global and
regional scale dynamics - MM5 Outflow and GEOS-CHEM Inflow ? OK
- GEOS-CHEM Outflow and MM5 Inflow ? Problems
- Remedy (being tested by UH)
- Run regional scale model with global scale output
as input for initialization and analysis nudging - Too late to use this remedy for VISTAS modeling
- Other Options?
- In the case where GEOS-CHEM outflow and MM5
inflow, could replace hourly BC with seasonal
average BC or seasonal average inflow BC
18GEOS-CHEM Modeling for RPOs
- Daniel Jacob (Harvard) will be performing annual
(CY2002) GEOS-CHEM modeling for the RPOs - Project is being managed by a steering committee
comprised of representatives from all 5 RPOs - VISTAS volunteered to take the lead
- Workplan identifies three major tasks to be
completed by August 31, 2004 - VISTAS is funding Daewon Byun (UH) to convert
GEOS-CHEM outputs to boundary conditions for CMAQ
(CAMx?)
19Harvard Deliverables
- Global Emissions Inventory for CY2002
- Biomass burning inventory with 1x1 resolution
- GEOS-CHEM global 3-D concentration fields (4x 5
grid) with 3-hour resolution for three full-year
simulations - Baseline 2002 simulation with all anthropogenic
emissions - Sensitivity simulation with U.S. anthropogenic
emissions turned off - Sensitivity simulation with worldwide
anthropogenic emissions turned off - Model Performance Evaluation (MPE)
- IMPROVE and CASTNET
- Monthly mean SO4, NO3, TNO3, NH4, OC, EC, and
dust - Extensive MPE conducted under EPRI funding
20Natural Background Runs
- The GEOS-CHEM model results can be used to
evaluate natural conditions at Class I areas - Directly Method Turn off U.S. anthropogenic
emissions in GEOS-CHEM and examine pollutant
concentrations at Class I areas - 4x5 resolution too coarse to be useful
(especially for mountainous and costal sites) - 1x1 resolution will be more useful than 4x 5
resolution, but still might not meet our needs - Results available through EPRI funding in Fall
2004
214x 5 GEOS-CHEM Grid
22Natural Background Runs
- Indirect Method Turn off U.S. anthropogenic
emissions in GEOS-CHEM to generate a new set of
BCs that will be used for a CMAQ run at 36/12 km
resolution with U.S. anthropogenic emissions
turned-off. - New boundary conditions must be generated with
GEOS-CHEM (no U.S. emissions) to eliminate
recirculated U.S. anthropogenic emissions from
the boundary conditions - Advantages finer grid resolution, better
meteorological fields, more advanced air quality
model - Disadvantages time and
- Same concepts for evaluating true natural
conditions by removing worldwide anthropogenic
emissions in GEOS-CHEM.
234x 5 GEOS-CHEM Grid
244x 5 GEOS-CHEM Grid
25Discussion Issues
- Options for addressing inconsistencies between
the global and regional meteorological fields? - Natural Background Simulations
- Direct or Indirect Method?
- Turn-off U.S. anthropogenic emissions or turn-off
all North American anthropogenic emissions? - Boundary Conditions for 2002 typical and 2018
typical CMAQ simulation - Use 3-hour GEOS-CHEM BCs or use seasonal average
GEOS-CHEM BCs or use seasonal average
inflow/outflow BCs? - Other Issues?