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Regional sources of atmospheric formaldehyde and acetaldehyde, and implications for atmospheric modeling
Abstract Formaldehyde and acetaldehyde concentrations over the Eastern half of the United States are simulated with a 3-D air quality model to identify the most important chemical precursors under January and July conditions. We find that both aldehydes primarily result from photochemical production, although 25% or more result from direct emissions in urban areas during winter. Isoprene is the major precursor of formaldehyde in most areas during summer, contributing 20–60% of total production, with the magnitude being spatially variable. Other alkenes from anthropogenic and/or biogenic emissions dominate formaldehyde production in winter, contributing 60–85% of total formation, and are prominent contributors in summer. Alkenes, including biogenic alkenes, dominate acetaldehyde production during both seasons. These conclusions are based on the degradation of emitted VOCs described by the SAPRC07TB chemical mechanism, but even this detailed model has difficulty reproducing observed values better than a factor of 2. The substantial role of isoprene and other alkenes in aldehyde formation emphasizes that we examine and improve emission estimates of these compounds. Until we can estimate the emissions and understand the chemistry of VOC precursors to aldehyde formation with greater certainty, it will be difficult to accurately predict atmospheric concentrations of aldehydes and develop strategies to reduce their concentrations.
Highlights ► Over 80% of ambient formaldehyde and acetaldehyde is from photochemical production. ► Isoprene contributes to summer formaldehyde, but the amount is highly variable. ► Alkenes are the major contributor to ambient acetaldehyde concentrations.
Regional sources of atmospheric formaldehyde and acetaldehyde, and implications for atmospheric modeling
Abstract Formaldehyde and acetaldehyde concentrations over the Eastern half of the United States are simulated with a 3-D air quality model to identify the most important chemical precursors under January and July conditions. We find that both aldehydes primarily result from photochemical production, although 25% or more result from direct emissions in urban areas during winter. Isoprene is the major precursor of formaldehyde in most areas during summer, contributing 20–60% of total production, with the magnitude being spatially variable. Other alkenes from anthropogenic and/or biogenic emissions dominate formaldehyde production in winter, contributing 60–85% of total formation, and are prominent contributors in summer. Alkenes, including biogenic alkenes, dominate acetaldehyde production during both seasons. These conclusions are based on the degradation of emitted VOCs described by the SAPRC07TB chemical mechanism, but even this detailed model has difficulty reproducing observed values better than a factor of 2. The substantial role of isoprene and other alkenes in aldehyde formation emphasizes that we examine and improve emission estimates of these compounds. Until we can estimate the emissions and understand the chemistry of VOC precursors to aldehyde formation with greater certainty, it will be difficult to accurately predict atmospheric concentrations of aldehydes and develop strategies to reduce their concentrations.
Highlights ► Over 80% of ambient formaldehyde and acetaldehyde is from photochemical production. ► Isoprene contributes to summer formaldehyde, but the amount is highly variable. ► Alkenes are the major contributor to ambient acetaldehyde concentrations.
Regional sources of atmospheric formaldehyde and acetaldehyde, and implications for atmospheric modeling
Luecken, D.J. (author) / Hutzell, W.T. (author) / Strum, M.L. (author) / Pouliot, G.A. (author)
Atmospheric Environment ; 47 ; 477-490
2011-10-03
14 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
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