001     890293
005     20240712101034.0
024 7 _ |2 doi
|a 10.5194/acp-20-7843-2020
024 7 _ |2 ISSN
|a 1680-7316
024 7 _ |2 ISSN
|a 1680-7324
024 7 _ |2 Handle
|a 2128/27082
024 7 _ |2 altmetric
|a altmetric:85311299
024 7 _ |2 WOS
|a WOS:000547864400001
037 _ _ |a FZJ-2021-00874
082 _ _ |a 550
100 1 _ |0 0000-0003-3549-6889
|a Mertens, Mariano
|b 0
|e Corresponding author
245 _ _ |a Attributing ozone and its precursors to land transport emissions in Europe and Germany
260 _ _ |a Katlenburg-Lindau
|b EGU
|c 2020
336 7 _ |2 DRIVER
|a article
336 7 _ |2 DataCite
|a Output Types/Journal article
336 7 _ |0 PUB:(DE-HGF)16
|2 PUB:(DE-HGF)
|a Journal Article
|b journal
|m journal
|s 1611761782_22003
336 7 _ |2 BibTeX
|a ARTICLE
336 7 _ |2 ORCID
|a JOURNAL_ARTICLE
336 7 _ |0 0
|2 EndNote
|a Journal Article
520 _ _ |a Land transport is an important emission source of nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide, and volatile organic compounds. The emissions of nitrogen oxides affect air quality directly. Further, all of these emissions serve as a precursor for the formation of tropospheric ozone, thus leading to an indirect influence on air quality. In addition, ozone is radiatively active and its increase leads to a positive radiative forcing. Due to the strong non-linearity of the ozone chemistry, the contribution of emission sources to ozone cannot be calculated or measured directly. Instead, atmospheric chemistry models equipped with specific source attribution methods (e.g. tagging methods) are required. In this study we investigate the contribution of land transport emissions to ozone and ozone precursors using the MECO(n) model system (MESSy-fied ECHAM and COSMO models nested n times). This model system couples a global and a regional chemistry climate model and is equipped with a tagging diagnostic. We investigate the combined effect of long-range-transported ozone and ozone which is produced by European emissions by applying the tagging diagnostic simultaneously and consistently on the global and regional scale. We performed two simulations each covering 3 years with different anthropogenic emission inventories for Europe. We applied two regional refinements, i.e. one refinement covering Europe (50 km resolution) and one covering Germany (12 km resolution). The diagnosed absolute contributions of land transport emissions to reactive nitrogen (NOy) near ground level are in the range of 5 to 10 nmol mol−1. This corresponds to relative contributions of 50 % to 70 %. The largest absolute contributions appear around Paris, southern England, Moscow, the Po Valley, and western Germany. The absolute contributions to carbon monoxide range from 30 nmol mol−1 to more than 75 nmol mol−1 near emission hot-spots such as Paris or Moscow. The ozone which is attributed to land transport emissions shows a strong seasonal cycle with absolute contributions of 3 nmol mol−1 during winter and 5 to 10 nmol mol−1 during summer. This corresponds to relative contributions of 8 % to 10 % during winter and up to 16 % during summer. The largest values during summer are confined to the Po Valley, while the contributions in western Europe range from 12 % to 14 %. Only during summer are the ozone contributions slightly influenced by the anthropogenic emission inventory, but these differences are smaller than the range of the seasonal cycle of the contribution to land transport emissions. This cycle is caused by a complex interplay of seasonal cycles of other emissions (e.g. biogenic) and seasonal variations of the ozone regimes. In addition, our results suggest that during events with large ozone values the ozone contributions of land transport and biogenic emissions increase strongly. Here, the contribution of land transport emissions peaks up to 28 %. Hence, our model results suggest that land transport emissions are an important contributor during periods with large ozone values.
536 _ _ |0 G:(DE-HGF)POF3-243
|a 243 - Tropospheric trace substances and their transformation processes (POF3-243)
|c POF3-243
|f POF III
|x 0
588 _ _ |a Dataset connected to CrossRef
700 1 _ |0 P:(DE-Juel1)180121
|a Kerkweg, Astrid
|b 1
|u fzj
700 1 _ |0 0000-0002-8012-6783
|a Grewe, Volker
|b 2
700 1 _ |0 0000-0002-8964-1394
|a Jöckel, Patrick
|b 3
700 1 _ |0 0000-0002-9572-2393
|a Sausen, Robert
|b 4
773 _ _ |0 PERI:(DE-600)2069847-1
|a 10.5194/acp-20-7843-2020
|g Vol. 20, no. 13, p. 7843 - 7873
|n 13
|p 7843 - 7873
|t Atmospheric chemistry and physics
|v 20
|x 1680-7324
|y 2020
856 4 _ |u https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/890293/files/acp-20-7843-2020.pdf
|y OpenAccess
909 C O |o oai:juser.fz-juelich.de:890293
|p openaire
|p open_access
|p driver
|p VDB:Earth_Environment
|p VDB
|p dnbdelivery
910 1 _ |0 I:(DE-588b)5008462-8
|6 P:(DE-Juel1)180121
|a Forschungszentrum Jülich
|b 1
|k FZJ
913 1 _ |0 G:(DE-HGF)POF3-243
|1 G:(DE-HGF)POF3-240
|2 G:(DE-HGF)POF3-200
|3 G:(DE-HGF)POF3
|4 G:(DE-HGF)POF
|a DE-HGF
|b Erde und Umwelt
|l Atmosphäre und Klima
|v Tropospheric trace substances and their transformation processes
|x 0
914 1 _ |y 2020
915 _ _ |0 StatID:(DE-HGF)0200
|2 StatID
|a DBCoverage
|b SCOPUS
|d 2020-09-03
915 _ _ |0 StatID:(DE-HGF)0160
|2 StatID
|a DBCoverage
|b Essential Science Indicators
|d 2020-09-03
915 _ _ |0 LIC:(DE-HGF)CCBY4
|2 HGFVOC
|a Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 4.0
915 _ _ |0 StatID:(DE-HGF)0100
|2 StatID
|a JCR
|b ATMOS CHEM PHYS : 2018
|d 2020-09-03
915 _ _ |0 StatID:(DE-HGF)9905
|2 StatID
|a IF >= 5
|b ATMOS CHEM PHYS : 2018
|d 2020-09-03
915 _ _ |0 StatID:(DE-HGF)0501
|2 StatID
|a DBCoverage
|b DOAJ Seal
|d 2020-09-03
915 _ _ |0 StatID:(DE-HGF)0500
|2 StatID
|a DBCoverage
|b DOAJ
|d 2020-09-03
915 _ _ |0 StatID:(DE-HGF)0113
|2 StatID
|a WoS
|b Science Citation Index Expanded
|d 2020-09-03
915 _ _ |0 StatID:(DE-HGF)0700
|2 StatID
|a Fees
|d 2020-09-03
915 _ _ |0 StatID:(DE-HGF)0150
|2 StatID
|a DBCoverage
|b Web of Science Core Collection
|d 2020-09-03
915 _ _ |0 StatID:(DE-HGF)0510
|2 StatID
|a OpenAccess
915 _ _ |0 StatID:(DE-HGF)0030
|2 StatID
|a Peer Review
|b DOAJ : Peer review
|d 2020-09-03
915 _ _ |0 StatID:(DE-HGF)0561
|2 StatID
|a Article Processing Charges
|d 2020-09-03
915 _ _ |0 StatID:(DE-HGF)1150
|2 StatID
|a DBCoverage
|b Current Contents - Physical, Chemical and Earth Sciences
|d 2020-09-03
915 _ _ |0 StatID:(DE-HGF)0300
|2 StatID
|a DBCoverage
|b Medline
|d 2020-09-03
915 _ _ |0 StatID:(DE-HGF)0199
|2 StatID
|a DBCoverage
|b Clarivate Analytics Master Journal List
|d 2020-09-03
920 1 _ |0 I:(DE-Juel1)IEK-8-20101013
|k IEK-8
|l Troposphäre
|x 0
980 1 _ |a FullTexts
980 _ _ |a journal
980 _ _ |a VDB
980 _ _ |a UNRESTRICTED
980 _ _ |a I:(DE-Juel1)IEK-8-20101013
981 _ _ |a I:(DE-Juel1)ICE-3-20101013


LibraryCollectionCLSMajorCLSMinorLanguageAuthor
Marc 21