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Comparison of Urban Air Quality Simulations During the KORUS‐AQ Campaign With Regionally Refined Versus Global Uniform Grids in the Multi‐Scale Infrastructure for Chemistry and Aerosols (MUSICA) Version 0.

Authors :
Jo, Duseong S.
Emmons, Louisa K.
Callaghan, Patrick
Tilmes, Simone
Woo, Jung‐Hun
Kim, Younha
Kim, Jinseok
Granier, Claire
Soulié, Antonin
Doumbia, Thierno
Darras, Sabine
Buchholz, Rebecca R.
Simpson, Isobel J.
Blake, Donald R.
Wisthaler, Armin
Schroeder, Jason R.
Fried, Alan
Kanaya, Yugo
Source :
Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems; Jul2023, Vol. 15 Issue 7, p1-29, 29p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Model intercomparison studies often report a large spread in simulation results, but quantifying the causes of these differences is hindered by the fact that several processes contribute to the model spread simultaneously. Here we use the Multi‐Scale Infrastructure for Chemistry and Aerosols (MUSICA) version 0 to investigate the model resolution dependencies of simulated chemical species, with a focus on the differences between global uniform grid and regional refinement grid simulations with the same modeling framework. We construct two global (ne30 [∼112 km] and ne60 [∼56 km]) and two regional refinement grids over Korea (ne30x8 [∼14 km] and ne30x16 [∼7 km]). The grid resolution can change chemical concentrations by an order of magnitude in the boundary layer, and the importance increases as the species' reactivity increases (e.g., up to 50% and 1,000% changes for ethane and xylenes, respectively). The diurnal cycle of oxidants (OH, O3, and NO3) also varies with the grid resolution, which leads to different oxidation pathways of volatile organic compounds (e.g., the fraction of monoterpenes reacting with NO3 in Seoul around midnight is 90% for ne30, but 65% for ne30x16). The models with high‐resolution grids usually do a better job at reproducing aircraft observations during the KORUS‐AQ campaign, but not always, implying compensating errors in the coarse grid simulations. For example, ozone is better reproduced by the coarse grid due to the artificial mixing of NOx. When developing new chemical mechanisms and evaluating models over urban areas, the uncertainties associated with model resolution should be considered. Plain Language Summary: A new model framework, the Multi‐Scale Infrastructure for Chemistry and Aerosols version 0 (MUSICAv0), has been developed at NCAR to enable a computationally feasible global modeling framework while still resolving chemistry at urban scales. Using the MUSICAv0 framework with different horizontal grid resolutions (∼112, ∼56, ∼14, and ∼7 km), this work examines how much horizontal grid resolution can affect simulated chemical concentrations in 3D chemistry models. Model concentrations can vary up to 10 times between ∼112 and ∼7 km grids over urban areas at the surface. On the other hand, a region‐specific emission inventory with detailed local information is essential for some chemical species, although it is generally less important than the grid resolution for many chemical species. The model with a high‐resolution grid better reproduces observations in general, but in some cases compensating errors result in better comparisons for the coarse grid. This work suggests that the effects of grid resolution should not be ignored when evaluating new chemical mechanisms and chemistry models in future studies, and high grid resolution in 3D models is needed to simulate air pollutants over urban and downwind regions. Key Points: The dependence of simulated chemical species on model resolution is quantified in a single modeling frameworkModel evaluations can be substantially affected by grid resolution, especially for urban surface and aircraft measurements at low altitudesGrid resolution strongly impacts the oxidation of volatile organic compounds through differences in diurnal variation of oxidants [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19422466
Volume :
15
Issue :
7
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
167371290
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2022MS003458