Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

A. Aulinger, V. Matthias, M. Quante, Institute for Coastal Research

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "A. Aulinger, V. Matthias, M. Quante, Institute for Coastal Research"— Presentation transcript:

1 Modeling trans-boundary transport of benzo(a)pyrene over Europe with CMAQ
A. Aulinger, V. Matthias, M. Quante, Institute for Coastal Research GKSS Research Center Geesthacht, Germany

2 Outline Introduction: Why PAHs ? Model modification and set up
Emissions Model results Comparison with measurements Conclusions and outlook

3 Why PAHs ? PAHs imperil humans and ecosystems
highly bioaccumulative (food chain) persistent in various environmental compartments significant adverse effects already at low doses carcinogenic impair immune system impair reproduction B(a)P Object of international reduction conventions (Target values for air concentrations - EU: 1 ng/m3 (annual average), UK: 0.25 ng/m3) Emissions are likely to increase wood burning, ship traffic

4 MM5 and CMAQ for annual simulations
model domain 30 vertical layers up to 100 hPa 54x54 km2 grid 18x18 km2 grid

5 Model set up for annual simulations
CMAQ: Version 4.5 CB IV chemistry scheme Aero 4 module incl. SOA formation Anthrop. emissions from IER Stuttgart based on EMEP and EPER data base Natural emissions from GEIA and RETRO database B(a)P emissions from Denier van der Gon et al. (TNO report, 2005)

6 Some chemical species in CMAQ (CB-IV mechanism):
Aerosols in three size classes (visibility also calculated) 7 inorganic, 2 organic nitrogen species SO2, sulfate (sulfuric acid) Seasalt Anthropogenic and biogenic volatile organics O3, H2O2, OH Benzo(a)pyrene

7 Partitioning

8 Electricity generation Iron and steel production
Emissions major sources Residential heating Road transport Electricity generation Iron and steel production Incineration of household waste Ship engines Oil platforms Wildfires B(a)P emissions in 2000 PAHs are formed by any incomplete combustion of organic matter

9 Emissions Time scheme Constant (case a) Seasonality after TNO (case b)

10 Emissions Temperature dependence

11 Emissions

12 Emissions

13 Time variant emissions (expl. Berlin 2000)
case c

14 Simulations vs. measurements

15 Simulations vs. measurements

16 Correlations Station Roervik, SE, rural, monthly means 0.479 0.636
Case A Case B Case C Roervik, SE, rural, monthly means 0.479 0.636 0.689 Aspvreten, SE, rural, monthly means -0.105 0.239 0.183 Pallas, FI, remote, monthly means 0.746 0.763 0.595 Preila, LT, urban, monthly means 0.639 0.653 0.798 Kosetice, CZ rural, monthly means 0.845 0.829 0.971 Lista, NO, remote monthly means -0.058 -0.052 -0.09 Bornhoeved, DE, rural, weekly means 0.684 0.724 0.718 Radebeul, DE, suburban 2-day means 0.581 0.646 0.727

17 Depositions into the Baltic Sea
Total depositions in 2000 in t Depositions in t Case A 12.05 Case B 12.82 Case C 13.43

18 CMAQ with 12 vertical layers  10-15% lower concentrations
CMAQ results: B(a)P concentrations in Europe for lowest layer total annual amount of emitted B(a)P was the same for both model runs (based on 2000 data) CMAQ with 12 vertical layers  10-15% lower concentrations

19 CMAQ results: B(a)P concentrations over the North Sea
for lowest layer

20 CMAQ results: B(a)P wet deposition over the North Sea

21 Precipitation

22 CMAQ results vs. EMEP measurements: B(a)P concentrations
statistics CMAQ model results vs. EMEP measurements, statistical quality indicators, times series year 2000 and 2001

23 Emission data

24 CMAQ results vs. EMEP measurements: PM10 concentrations
stations, daily means 2000 PM10 [gm-3] Deuselbach, Germany, 480 m asl Mean (meas) mg/m3 bias mg/m3 rms error mg/m3 Correlation 0.47 IOA 0.64 measurements model PM10, IOA, total year

25 Conclusions and outlook
Correlations simulations vs. measurements already acceptable with constant emissions but notably better with time-variant emissions Simulations tend to overestimate observations Differences between different simulation periods more prominent concerning deposition than concentrations Best agreement with measurement stations in the vicinity of sources Higher resolved model domain and emissions required, for investigation on small regional scales Long-term studies over several years planned Degradation of pollutants should be considered Ship emissions will be considered We recommend the revision of emission data

26 Outlook - ship emissions

27 Thank you for your attention
THE END


Download ppt "A. Aulinger, V. Matthias, M. Quante, Institute for Coastal Research"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google