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Modelling of Dust Emissions from Agricultural Sources in Europe
- Publication Year :
- 2023
-
Abstract
- Dust aerosol emission is a critical topic in agriculture, occurring either by aeolian process from bare or sparsely vegetated cropland or as fugitive emission during tilling, harvest and many other farming activities. Aerosols, which are in the case of agriculture either mineral dust, organic particles or a mixture, are known for impacting human health, cloud formation and ultimately, the earth’s climate and ecosystem. Coupled atmosphere and aerosol transport models are commonly used to study aerosol dispersion in the atmosphere, but so far, agricultural sources are under-represented. Hence, estimations of these emissions’ actual impact are still somewhat uncertain regarding their seasonality, spatial distribution and the fraction of the global aerosol load. To fill this gap, this study aims at identifying suitable approaches for modelling aeolian emissions from sparsely vegetated cropland and fugitive emissions from tilling. Fugitive emissions are challenging since they mainly depend on human activity that is not predictable, but observed events can be used as case studies. For this, a Lagrangian particle dispersion model was chosen, which can trace the trajectory of individual particles in the emitted dust plume. So the particle model “Itpas” was developed to tackle fugitive emissions and to be capable of simulating the complex turbulent mixing of dust particles inside the atmospheric boundary layer. This model was used to simulate a case study based on measured tilling emissions, showing the particle dispersion for a stable and unstable stratified boundary layer. It was shown that within a stably stratified boundary layer, the dust plume is restricted to the near-source region. In contrast, emissions in unstable boundary layers go into long-range transport. This illustrates the spatial range a single tillage operation can have an impact. Aeolian dust emissions are controlled by the wind. For cropland, the emission variability is caused mainly by the frequently ch
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Notes :
- German, German
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1445761481
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource