Novel estimation of aerosol processes with particle size distribution measurements: a case study with the TOMAS algorithm v1.0.0

被引:1
|
作者
McGuffin, Dana L. [1 ]
Huang, Yuanlong [2 ]
Flagan, Richard C. [2 ]
Petaja, Tuukka [3 ]
Ydstie, B. Erik [4 ]
Adams, Peter J. [5 ]
机构
[1] Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab, Livermore, CA 94550 USA
[2] CALTECH, Div Chem & Chem Engn, Pasadena, CA 91125 USA
[3] Univ Helsinki, Fac Sci, Inst Atmospher & Earth Syst Res INAR Phys, Helsinki, Finland
[4] Carnegie Mellon Univ, Dept Chem Engn, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA
[5] Carnegie Mellon Univ, Ctr Atmospher Particle Studies, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA
基金
芬兰科学院; 美国安德鲁·梅隆基金会; 欧盟地平线“2020”;
关键词
PASSIVITY-BASED CONTROL; OPTICAL DEPTH; CCN CONCENTRATIONS; PRIMARY EMISSIONS; NUCLEATION RATES; CONDENSATION; MODEL; INVERSION; IMPACT; GROWTH;
D O I
10.5194/gmd-14-1821-2021
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Atmospheric aerosol microphysical processes are a significant source of uncertainty in predicting climate change. Specifically, aerosol nucleation, emissions, and growth rates, which are simulated in chemical transport models to predict the particle size distribution, are not understood well. However, long-term size distribution measurements made at several ground-based sites across Europe implicitly contain information about the processes that created those size distributions. This work aims to extract that information by developing and applying an inverse technique to constrain aerosol emissions as well as nucleation and growth rates based on hourly size distribution measurements. We developed an inverse method based upon process control theory into an online estimation technique to scale aerosol nucleation, emissions, and growth so that the model-measurement bias in three measured aerosol properties exponentially decays. The properties, which are calculated from the measured and predicted size distributions, used to constrain aerosol nucleation, emission, and growth rates are the number of particles with a diameter between 3 and 6 nm, the number with a diameter greater than 10 nm, and the total dry volume of aerosol (N3-6, N-10, V-dry), respectively. In this paper, we focus on developing and applying the estimation methodology in a zero-dimensional "box" model as a proof of concept before applying it to a three-dimensional simulation in subsequent work. The methodology is first tested on a dataset of synthetic and perfect measurements that span diverse environments in which the true particle emissions, growth, and nucleation rates are known. The inverse technique accurately estimates the aerosol microphysical process rates with an average and maximum error of 2% and 13 %, respectively. Next, we investigate the effect that measurement noise has on the estimated rates. The method is robust to typical instrument noise in the aerosol properties as there is a negligible increase in the bias of the estimated process rates. Finally, the methodology is applied to long-term datasets of in situ size distribution measurements in western Europe from May 2006 through June 2007. At Melpitz, Germany, and Hyytiala, Finland, the average diurnal profiles of estimated 3 nm particle formation rates are reasonable, having peaks near noon local time with average peak values of 1 and 0.15 cm(-3) s(-1), respectively. The normalized absolute error in estimated N3-6, N-10, and Vdry at three European measurement sites is less than 15 %, showing that the estimation framework developed here has potential to decrease model-measurement bias while constraining uncertain aerosol microphysical processes.
引用
收藏
页码:1821 / 1839
页数:19
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