NO2 seasonal evolution in the north subtropical free troposphere

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Abstract

Three years of multi-axis differential optical absorption spectroscopy (MAXDOAS) measurements (2011-2013) have been used for estimating the NO2 mixing ratio along a horizontal line of sight from the high mountain subtropical observatory of Izaña, at 2370 m a.s.l. (NDACC station, 28.3° N, 16.5° W). The method is based on horizontal path calculation from the O2-O2 collisional complex at the 477 nm absorption band which is measured simultaneously to the NO2 column density, and is applicable under low aerosol-loading conditions. The MAXDOAS technique, applied in horizontal mode in the free troposphere, minimizes the impact of the NO2 contamination resulting from the arrival of marine boundary layer (MBL) air masses from thermally forced upwelling breeze during middle hours of the day. Comparisons with in situ observations show that during most of the measuring period, the MAXDOAS is insensitive or very slightly sensitive to the upwelling breeze. Exceptions are found for pollution events during southern wind conditions. On these occasions, evidence of fast, efficient and irreversible transport from the surface to the free troposphere is found. Background NO2 volume mixing ratio (vmr), representative of the remote free troposphere, is in the range of 20-45 pptv. The observed seasonal evolution shows an annual wave where the peak is in phase with the solar radiation. Model simulations with the chemistry-climate CAM-Chem model are in good agreement with the NO2 measurements, and are used to further investigate the possible drivers of the NO2 seasonality observed at Izaña.

Figures

  • Figure 1. Measured O4 slant column density versus modeled O4 for a pure Rayleigh atmosphere at the 477 nm band by using cross sections at 203 and 293 K temperatures (see text for details).
  • Table 1. Method uncertainty.
  • Figure 2. Example of NO2 averaging kernels obtained in our profile retrieval, corresponding to 8 May 2013 at 12:00 UTC.
  • Figure 3. In situ NO2 volume mixing ratio measurements made every minute versus Izaña MAXDOAS, for a period of time representative of three different wind situations. In situ data are smoothed by 50 min running mean (top panel). An expanded plot is shown for 8 May 2013 (day number 128). A back trajectory ending at Izaña at 15 h of the same day is shown.
  • Figure 6. NO2 concentration monthly means at the level of Izaña observatory with their respective standard deviations (open circles and black lines). CAM-Chem model results for the same level are shown for comparison (red stars and lines). Individual solid gray circles represent the 3-year diurnal mean.
  • Figure 4. Unsmoothed vertical profiles of NO2 vmr (in ppbv) for day 128/2013 obtained by the OEM technique. Each vertical column represents an individual scanning cycle (for details, see text).
  • Figure 5. Seasonal evolution of the individual data NO2 vmr separated by (a) years, (b) solar zenith angles and (c) RMSE.
  • Figure 7. One-week HYSPLIT back trajectory clusters arriving at Izaña observatory for the winter months (DJF), left panel, and for the summer months (JJA), right panel, for the years 2011–2013.

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APA

Gil-Ojeda, M., Navarro-Comas, M., Gómez-Martín, L., Adame, J. A., Saiz-Lopez, A., Cuevas, C. A., … Tilmes, S. (2015). NO2 seasonal evolution in the north subtropical free troposphere. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 15(18), 10567–10579. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-15-10567-2015

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