Photochemical model evaluation of 2013 California wild fire air quality impacts using surface, aircraft, and satellite data

Baker, K.R., M.C. Woody, L. Valin, J.J. Szykman, E.L. Yates, L.T. Iraci, H.D. Choi, A. Soja, S.N. Koplitz, L. Zhou, P. Campuzano Jost, J.L. Jimenez-Palacios, and J. Hair (2018), Photochemical model evaluation of 2013 California wild fire air quality impacts using surface, aircraft, and satellite data, Science of the Total Environment, 637–638, 1137-1149, doi:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.05.048.
Abstract

The Rim Fire was one of the largest wildfires in California history, burning over 250,000 acres during August and September 2013 affecting air quality locally and regionally in the western U.S. Routine surface monitors, remotely sensed data, and aircraft based measurements were used to assess how well the Community Multiscale Air Quality (CMAQ) photochemical grid model applied at 4 and 12 km resolution represented regional plume transport and chemical evolution during this extreme wildland fire episode. Impacts were generally similar at both grid resolutions although notable differences were seen in some secondary pollutants (e.g., formaldehyde and peroxyacyl nitrate) near the Rim fire. The modeling system does well at capturing near-fire to regional scale smoke plume transport compared to remotely sensed aerosol optical depth (AOD) and aircraft transect measurements. Plume rise for the Rim fire was well characterized as the modeled plume top was consistent with remotely sensed data and the altitude of aircraft measurements, which were typically made at the top edge of the plume. Aircraftbased lidar suggests O3 downwind in the Rim fire plume was vertically stratified and tended to be higher at the plume top, while CMAQ estimated a more uniformly mixed column of O3. Predicted wildfire ozone (O3) was overestimated both at the plume top and at nearby rural and urban surface monitors. Photolysis rates were well characterized by the model compared with aircraft measurements meaning aerosol attenuation was reasonably estimated and unlikely contributing to O3 overestimates at the top of the plume. Organic carbon was underestimated close to the Rim fire compared to aircraft data, but was consistent with nearby surface measurements. Periods of elevated surface PM2.5 at rural monitors near the Rim fire were not usually coincident with elevated O3.

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Research Program
Tropospheric Composition Program (TCP)
Mission
SEAC4RS
AJAX