Docsity
Docsity

Prepare for your exams
Prepare for your exams

Study with the several resources on Docsity


Earn points to download
Earn points to download

Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan


Guidelines and tips
Guidelines and tips

Global Models of Atmospheric Composition - Atmospheric Chemistry - Lecture Slides, Slides of Chemistry

Major topics of Atmospheric Chemistry course are Acid Rain, Aerosol, Aerosols Optics, Geochemical Cycles, Global Models, Trop Ozone Pollution and many others. These lecture slides contain following keywords: Global Models of Atmospheric Composition, Atmospheric Composition, Gridboxes, Operator Splitting in Eulerian Models, Transport Operator, Vertical Turbulent Transport, Aerosol Concentrations, Specific Issues for Aerosol Concentrations, Lagrangian Receptor-Oriented Modeling, Eulerian Models

Typology: Slides

2012/2013

Uploaded on 08/21/2013

babaa
babaa 🇮🇳

4.4

(38)

94 documents

1 / 30

Toggle sidebar

This page cannot be seen from the preview

Don't miss anything!

bg1
GLOBAL MODELS OF ATMOSPHERIC COMPOSITION
docsity.com
pf3
pf4
pf5
pf8
pf9
pfa
pfd
pfe
pff
pf12
pf13
pf14
pf15
pf16
pf17
pf18
pf19
pf1a
pf1b
pf1c
pf1d
pf1e

Partial preview of the text

Download Global Models of Atmospheric Composition - Atmospheric Chemistry - Lecture Slides and more Slides Chemistry in PDF only on Docsity!

GLOBAL MODELS OF ATMOSPHERIC COMPOSITION

HOW TO MODEL ATMOSPHERIC COMPOSITION?

Solve continuity equation for chemical mixing ratios

C

(x i

,^

t)

Fires

Landbiosphere

Humanactivity

Lightning

Ocean

Volcanoes

Transport

Eulerian form:

i

i^

i^

i

C

C

P

L

t

 

U

Lagrangian form:

i

i^

i

dC

P

L

dt

U

= wind vector

P

i^

=

local sourceof chemical

i

L

i^

= local sink

Chemistry

Aerosol microphysics

docsity.com

OPERATOR SPLITTING IN EULERIAN MODELS

i^

i^

i

TRANSPORT

LOCAL

C

C

dC

t

t

dt

… and integrate each process separately over discrete time steps:

(Local)•(Transport)

i^

o

i^

o

C

t

t

C

t

Split the continuity equation into contributions from transport and local terms:

Transport

advection, convection:

Local

chemistry, emission, deposition, aerosol processes:

i

i

TRANSPORT

i

i

LOCAL

dC

C

dt

dC

P

dt

U

i

L

C

C

These operators can be split further: •

split transport into 1-D advective and turbulent transport for

x, y, z

(usually necessary)

split local into chemistry, emissions, deposition (usually not necessary)

Reduces dimensionality of problem

SPLITTING THE TRANSPORT OPERATOR

Wind velocity

U

has turbulent fluctuations over time step

t

:

( )

'( )

t

t

U

U

U

Time-averagedcomponent(resolved)

Fluctuating component(stochastic)

1

(

)

i^

i^

i

xx

C

C

C

u

K

t

x

x

x

 

Further split transport in

x, y, and z

to reduce dimensionality. In

x

direction:

u v w

U

Split transport into advection (mean wind) and turbulent components:

1

i

i^

i

C

C

C

t

 

 

 

U

K

air densityturbulent diffusion matrix
K

advection

turbulence (

st

-order closure)

advectionoperator

turbulentoperator

VERTICAL TURBULENT TRANSPORT (BUOYANCY)

Convective cloud(0.1-100 km)

Model grid scale

Modelverticallevels

updraft

entrainment

downdraft

detrainment

Wet convection issubgrid scale in globalmodels and must betreated as a verticalmass exchangeseparate from transportby grid-scale winds.Need info on convectivemass fluxes from themodel meteorologicaldriver.

generally dominates over mean vertical advection

K-diffusion OK for dry convection in boundary layer (small eddies)

Deeper (wet) convection requires non-local convective parameterization

LOCAL (CHEMISTRY) OPERATOR:

solves ODE system for

n

interacting species

i

n

1

i

i^

i^

n

dC

P

L

C

C

dt

C

C

C

System is typically “stiff” (lifetimes range over many orders of magnitude)

implicit solution method is necessary.

Simplest method: backward Euler. Transform into system of

n

algebraic

equations with

n

unknowns

i^

o

i^

o

i^

o

i^

o

C

t^

t

C

t

P

t

t

L

t

t

i

n

t

C

C

o

t

t

C

Solve e.g., by Newton’s method. Backward Euler is stable, mass-conserving,flexible (can use other constraints such as steady-state, chemical familyclosure, etc… in lieu of

C



t

)

^

But it is expensive. Most 3-D models use

For each species higher-order implicit schemes such as the Gear method.

LAGRANGIAN APPROACH: TRACK TRANSPORT OF

POINTS IN MODEL DOMAIN (NO GRID)

U

t

U’

t

Transport large number of points with trajectories from input meteorological data base (U) + randomturbulent component (U’) over time steps

t

Points have mass but no volume

Determine local concentrations as the number of points within a given volume •

Nonlinear chemistry requires Eulerian mapping at every time step (semi-Lagrangian)

PROS over Eulerian models:

no Courant number restrictions

no numerical diffusion/dispersion

easily track air parcel histories

invertible with respect to time

CONS:

need very large # points for statistics

inhomogeneous representation of domain

convection is poorly represented

nonlinear chemistry is problematic

position

t

o

position t

o

t

LAGRANGIAN RECEPTOR-ORIENTED MODELING

Run Lagrangian model backward from receptor location,with points released at receptor location only

Efficient cost-effective quantification of source influence distribution on receptor (“footprint”) •

Enables inversion of source influences by the adjoint method (backward model is the adjoint ofthe Lagrangian forward model)

GEOS-Chem GLOBAL 3-D CHEMICAL TRANSPORT MODEL

Solves 3-D continuity equations on global Eulerian grid using NASA Goddard Earth Observing System (GEOS) assimilated meteorological data (1985-present)or GISS GCM output (paleo and future climate) •

Horizontal resolution 1

o

x

o

to 4

o

x

o

, 48-72 vertical layers

Used by ~30 groups around the world for wide range of atmospheric composition problems: aerosols, oxidants, carbon, mercury, isotopes…

Illustrate here with Harvard work on tropospheric ozone

OZONE: “GOOD UP HIGH, BAD NEARBY”

Nitrogen oxide radicals; NO

x

= NO + NO

2

Sources: combustion, soils, lightning Volatile organic compounds (VOCs)

Methane Sources: wetlands, livestock, natural gas… Non-methane VOCs (NMVOCs) Sources: vegetation, combustion

Carbon monoxide (CO) Sources: combustion, VOC oxidation

Tropospheric

ozone

precursors

Climatology

of

observed

ozone

at

400

hPa

in

July

from

ozonesondes

and

MOZAIC

aircraft

(circles)

and

corresponding

GEOS-

Chem

model

results

for

1997 (contours).

GEOS-Chem troposphericozone columns for July 1997

.

GLOBAL DISTRIBUTION OF TROPOSPHERIC OZONE

Li et al., JGR [2001]

COMPARISON TO TES SATELLITE OBSERVATIONS

IN MIDDLE TROPOSPHERE

Zhang et al. [2006]

(July 2005) averagingkernels

GEOS-Chem GLOBAL BUDGET OF TROPOSPHERIC OZONE

O

O

2

h

O

OH

HO

h

, H

2

O

Deposition

NO

H

2

O

2

CO, VOC

NO

h

STRATOSPHERETROPOSPHERE

8-18 km

Chem prod introposphere,Tg y

Chem loss introposphere,Tg y

Transport fromstratosphere,Tg y

Deposition,Tg y

Burden, Tg

Lifetime, days

Present-dayPreindustrial

docsity.com

IPCC RADIATIVE FORCING ESTIMATE FOR TROPOSPHERIC

OZONE (0.35 W m

) RELIES ON GLOBAL MODELS

Preindustrialozone models

}

Observations at mountainsites in Europe[Marenco et al., 1994]

…but these underestimate the observed rise in ozone over the 20

th

century