Simulation of Regional Secondary Organic Aerosol Formation From Monocyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons Using a NearExplicit Chemical Mechanism Constrained by Chamber Experiments Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • AbstractThe formation of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) is inextricably linked to the photooxidation of aromatic hydrocarbons. However, models still exhibit biases in representing SOA mass and chemical composition. We implemented a box model coupled with a nearexplicit photochemical mechanism, the Master Chemical Mechanism (MCMv3.3.1), to simulate a series of chamber studies and assess model biases in simulating SOA from representative monocyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, that is, toluene and three xylene isomers (TX SOA). The box model underpredicted SOA yields of toluene and xylenes by 4.7%100%, which could be improved by adjusting the saturation vapor pressure (SVP) of their oxidation products. After updating the SVP values, the mass concentration of TX SOA in the Yangtze River Delta region during summer doubled, and there was also an approximate 3% enhancement in the total SOA. Compared to a lumped mechanism used for simulating TX SOA, MCM predicted comparable mass concentrations but exhibited different volatility distributions and oxidation states.

published proceedings

  • Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres

author list (cited authors)

  • Lu, H., Huang, Q. i., Li, J., Ying, Q. i., Wang, H., Guo, S., Qin, M., & Hu, J.

complete list of authors

  • Lu, Hutao||Huang, Qi||Li, Jingyi||Ying, Qi||Wang, Hongli||Guo, Song||Qin, Momei||Hu, Jianlin

publication date

  • June 2024