AI Article Synopsis

  • Understanding local-scale ozone formation variability is essential for effective mitigation strategies.
  • The study analyzes airborne and ground-based measurements of formaldehyde and nitrogen dioxide during high-ozone days in May-August 2018 in New York City and Baltimore/Washington D.C.
  • Increased formaldehyde levels and urban-centered nitrogen dioxide spikes imply a shift toward a more reactive ozone production regime, suggesting greater effectiveness of nitrogen dioxide reduction strategies on days when ozone levels are high.
  • Weather conditions, like temperature and wind patterns, also influence these ozone levels, with different effects observed between NYC and BAL/DC.

Article Abstract

Understanding the local-scale spatial and temporal variability of ozone formation is crucial for effective mitigation. We combine tropospheric vertical column densities (VCD) of formaldehyde (HCHO) and nitrogen dioxide (NO), referred to as HCHO-VCD and NO-VCD, retrieved from airborne remote sensing and the TROPOspheric Monitoring Instrument (TROPOMI) with ground-based measurements to investigate changes in ozone precursors and the inferred chemical production regime on high-ozone days in May-August 2018 over two Northeast urban domains. Over New York City (NYC) and Baltimore/Washington D.C. (BAL/DC), HCHO-VCD increases across the domain, but higher NO-VCD occurs mainly in urban centers on ozone exceedance days (when maximum daily 8 h average (MDA8) ozone exceeds 70 ppb at any monitor in the region). The ratio of HCHO-VCD to NO-VCD, proposed as an indicator of the sensitivity of local surface ozone production rates to its precursors, generally increases on ozone exceedance days, implying a transition toward a more NO-sensitive ozone production regime that should lead to higher efficacy of NO controls on the highest ozone days in NYC and BAL/DC. Warmer temperatures and enhanced influence from emissions in the local boundary layer on the high-ozone days are accompanied by slower wind speeds in BAL/DC but stronger, southwesterly winds in NYC.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9670856PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.2c02972DOI Listing

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