Tropospheric vertical column densities of NO2 over managed dryland ecosystems (Xinjiang, China): MAX-DOAS measurements vs. 3-D dispersion model simulations based on laboratory-derived NO emission from soil samples

3Citations
Citations of this article
12Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

We report on MAX-DOAS observations of NO2 over an oasis-ecotone-desert ecosystem in NW China. There, local ambient NO2 concentrations originate from enhanced biogenic NO emission of intensively managed soils. Our target oasis "Milan" is located at the southern edge of the Taklimakan desert, very remote and well isolated from other potential anthropogenic and biogenic NOx sources. Four observation sites for MAX-DOAS measurements were selected, at the oasis centre, downwind and upwind of the oasis, and in the desert. Biogenic NO emissions in terms of (i) soil moisture and (ii) soil temperature of Milan oasis (iii) different land-cover type sub-units (cotton, Jujube trees, cotton/Jujube mixture, desert) were quantified by laboratory incubation of corresponding soil samples. Net potential NO fluxes were up-scaled to oasis scale by areal distribution and classification of land-cover types derived from satellite images using GIS techniques. A Lagrangian dispersion model (LASAT, Lagrangian Simulation of Aerosol Transport) was used to calculate the dispersion of soil emitted NO into the atmospheric boundary layer over Milan oasis. Three-dimensional (3-D) NO concentrations (30 m horizontal resolution) have been converted to 3-D NO2 concentrations, assuming photostationary state conditions. NO2 column densities were simulated by suitable vertical integration of modelled 3-D NO2 concentrations at those downwind and upwind locations, where the MAX-DOAS measurements were performed. Downwind-upwind differences (a direct measure of Milan oasis' contribution to the areal increase of ambient NO2 concentration) of measured and simulated slant (as well as vertical) NO2 column densities show excellent agreement. This agreement is considered as the first successful attempt to prove the validity of the chosen approach to up-scale laboratory-derived biogenic NO fluxes to ecosystem field conditions, i.e. from the spatial scale of a soil sample (cm2) to the size of an entire agricultural ecosystem (km2).

Figures

  • Figure 1. Satellite map (Landsat ETM+; 2011) of Milan oasis, Xinjiang, NW China (The map has an area of 338 km2). The white circles show the sites of in situ measurements: natural forest (1), desert (2), jujube (3), hotel/oasis station (4) and cotton field (5).
  • Figure 2. Net potential NO fluxes FNO (ng m −2 s−1; in terms of mass of nitric oxide) from soils of the four major land-cover types of Milan oasis as functions of soil temperature (◦C) and dimensionless gravimetric soil moisture content.
  • Figure 3. 2011 map of land-cover types of Milan oasis as derived from satellite images (Quickbird, Landsat ETM+, see Sect. 2.2.5).
  • Figure 4. Median diel variation of the actual NO-flux (ng m−2 s−1; in terms of mass of nitric oxide) from soils of the four major landcover types of Milan oasis for the period 3–24 June, 2011. Data have been calculated according Eq. (10) using (a) soil temperatures (medians) measured for each of the four major land-cover types, and (b) so-called “wilting point” data for corresponding soil moisture contents at the four sites (see Sect. 2.2.3). Data for the cotton site are given as medians, as well as 25 and 75 % quantiles, and those for the Jujube, Jujube-cotton and desert sites as medians only (see figure insert).
  • Figure 5. Results of MAX-DOAS measurements performed at sites oasis/hotel (4), jujube (4), natural forest (1) and desert (2) of Milan oasis from 23 May to 26 June, 2011 (see Fig. 1). Vertical NO2 column densities (in molecules cm −2; 20–30 min averages) are shown in relation to in situ measured wind direction at each location of MAX-DOAS measurements. The MAX-DOAS measurements were performed between 06:00 and 19:00 LT. Note the radial logarithmic scale of VCD data.
  • Figure 6. Results of NO2 VCD measured simultaneously with two MAX-DOAS instruments upwind (natural forest, site (1)) and downwind (jujube field, site (3)) of Milan oasis on 9 and 13 June, 2011.
  • Figure 7. Results of NO concentrations (ng m−3; in terms of mass of nitric oxide) calculated by the LASAT dispersion model for the first four vertical levels on 9 June, 2011, 11:30 to 13:00 LT.
  • Figure 8. Simulated SCDs vs. SCDs measured by MAX-DOAS (a) and simulated VCDs vs. VCDs measured by MAX-DOAS (b) on 9 and 13 June, 2011 at Milan oasis. SCDs were measured and simulated for elevation angles of 2 and 4◦; VCDs were measured at 15◦.

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Mamtimin, B., Behrendt, T., Badawy, M. M., Wagner, T., Qi, Y., Wu, Z., & Meixner, F. X. (2015). Tropospheric vertical column densities of NO2 over managed dryland ecosystems (Xinjiang, China): MAX-DOAS measurements vs. 3-D dispersion model simulations based on laboratory-derived NO emission from soil samples. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 15(2), 867–882. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-15-867-2015

Readers over time

‘15‘16‘17‘19‘20‘21‘2300.751.52.253

Readers' Seniority

Tooltip

PhD / Post grad / Masters / Doc 5

56%

Professor / Associate Prof. 2

22%

Lecturer / Post doc 1

11%

Researcher 1

11%

Readers' Discipline

Tooltip

Earth and Planetary Sciences 3

38%

Environmental Science 2

25%

Economics, Econometrics and Finance 2

25%

Chemistry 1

13%

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free
0