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Aerosol-heat flux interactions in the boundary layer during the SIJAQ campaign.

Authors :
Oh, Sang-Seok
Lee, Hyo-Jung
Kim, Min-Seong
Park, Moon-Soo
Kim, Cheol-Hee
Source :
Atmospheric Environment. Feb2024, Vol. 319, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The Satellite Integrated Joint Monitoring of Air Quality (SIJAQ) field campaign, carried out from October 10 to November 25, 2021, included the measurement of detailed heat flux and air pollutants. In this study, we interpreted interactions between particulate matter (PM 2.5) and sensible heat flux (SHF) in the planetary boundary layer (PBL) over the Seoul metropolitan area during the SIJAQ campaign based on measurements and on- and offline WRF-Chem model simulations. Heat flux data obtained during the SIJAQ campaign was varied, depending on meteorological variables, including cloud cover, and revealed meaningful interactions between PM 2.5 and SHF. Throughout the campaign, the measured PM 2.5 –SHF during the daytime (10:00–16:00 LST) showed overall negative correlation with the correlation coefficient (R) of −0.38. During the campaign, the measured SHF on average was 68 ± 38 W/m2 on high PM 2.5 days (daily mean PM 2.5 ≥ 50 μg/m3), which is significantly lower (35% decrease) compared to the SHF of 105 ± 57 W/m2 on low PM 2.5 days (daily mean PM 2.5 < 50 μg/m3). Both on- and offline WRF-Chem simulation also showed that SHF and PM 2.5 were negatively correlated throughout the campaign with R of −0.49, in good agreement with the observations. As the comparative case study, we selected two extreme cases of 3-day periods with the lowest and highest PM 2.5 concentrations and aerosol effects were estimated based on both on- and offline WRF-Chem simulation and the case-specific aerosol–cloud–SHF–PBL relationship was explored. The results showed that the simulated aerosol-induced SHF was ∼14% (15 W/m2) lower on the highest PM 2.5 case during the campaign, whereas there was little or no significant relationship on the lowest PM 2.5 concentration case. Our modeling study also revealed the underlying impact of PM 2.5 concentrations on reducing SHF (with a slope = −0.41), and this reduction follows a specific sequence of processes: elevated PM 2.5 level led to a decrease in SHF, weakening the PBL evolution and reducing vertical mixing, ultimately resulting in high PM 2.5 concentrations accumulated in the PBL over the Seoul metropolitan area. • Aerosol-Heat flux-PBL relations are presented during the SIJAQ campaign. • A sequential process of PM 2.5 –Heat flux–PBL relation was found during the campaign. • The measured SHF-PM 2.5 showed strong negative correlation with R of −0.38 • WRF-Chem showed that the aerosol-induced SHF was up to 14% (15 W/m2). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13522310
Volume :
319
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Atmospheric Environment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174639475
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.atmosenv.2023.120306