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Chemistry, street canyon geometry, and emissions effects on NO₂ "hotspots" and regulatory "wiggle room"
Environmental Studies and Forestrynpj Climate and Atmospheric Science

Chemistry, street canyon geometry, and emissions effects on NO₂ "hotspots" and regulatory "wiggle room"

Y. Dai, X. Cai, et al.

Discover how a team of researchers, including Yuqing Dai, Xiaoming Cai, Jian Zhong, and A. Robert Mackenzie, unraveled the intricate chemical-transport processes of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) in urban settings. Their innovative modeling highlights how detailed VOC chemistry can drastically affect air quality assessments in street canyons, revealing crucial insights for regulatory air quality modeling.... show more
Abstract
The extent to which nitrogen dioxide (NO₂) undergoes complex chemical-transport processes near strong nitrogen-oxide sources in street canyons is not fully understood. A multi-box framework with volatile organic compound (VOC) chemistry has been evaluated against large-eddy simulation (LES) data and observations, and then used to simulate NO₂ at street-canyon "hotspots". 42,000 sensitivity studies varying nitrogen oxides (NOx) and VOC emission strength, and primary NO₂ fraction (fNO₂) emitted within each of five streetscape cases show the importance of detailed VOC chemistry, even in regular canyons (aspect ratio, AR = 1) when the ambient wind is weak. For a midsummer central London scenario, the inclusion of chemistry moves the canyon from compliance to out-of-compliance with the 1-hour NO₂ standard. Ignoring street-canyon chemistry can lead, therefore, to false positives in regulatory air quality modelling. Neglecting VOC chemistry can underestimate NO₂ by 6-22% in regular canyons, and even more (-51-31%) in deep canyons (AR = 2), particularly with lower fNO₂ values resulting from gasoline-dominated vehicle fleets or by tighter control of primary NO₂ from diesels. The very significant changes in regulatory "wiggle room" across sensitivity studies demonstrate the utility of this kind of chemistry-transport modelling for identifying efficient and effective regulatory pathways.
Publisher
npj Climate and Atmospheric Science
Published On
Dec 21, 2022
Authors
Yuqing Dai, Xiaoming Cai, Jian Zhong, A. Robert Mackenzie
Tags
nitrogen dioxidestreet canyonsVOC chemistryair quality modelingchemical transporturban emissions
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