Two decades of changes in summertime ozone production in California’s South Coast Air Basin
- Abstract
- Tropospheric ozone (O3) continues to be a threat to human health and agricultural productivity. While O3 control is challenging, tracking underlying formation mechanisms provides insights for regulatory directions. Here, we describe a comprehensive analysis of the effects of changing emissions on O3 formation mechanisms with observational evidence. We present a new approach that provides a quantitative metric for the ozone production rate (OPR) and its sensitivity to precursor levels by interpreting two decades of in situ observations of the six criteria air pollutants(2001-2018). Applying to the South Coast Air Basin (SoCAB), California, we show that by 2016-2018, the basin was at the transition region between nitrogen oxide (NOx)-limited and volatile organic compound (VOC)-limited chemical regimes. Assuming future weather conditions are similar to 2016-2018, we predict that NOx-focused reduction is required to reduce the number of summer days the SoCAB is in violation of the National Ambient Air Quality Standard (70 ppbv) for O3. Roughly, & SIM;40% (& SIM;60%) NOx reductions are required to reduce the OPR by similar to 1.8 ppb/h (similar to 3.3 ppb/h). This change would reduce the number of violation days from 28 to 20% (10%) in a year, mostly in summertime. Concurrent VOC reductions which reduce the production rate of HOx radicals would also be beneficial.
- Author(s)
- Perdigones, Begie C.; Lee, Soojin; Cohen, Ronald C.; Park, Jeong-Hoo; Min, Kyung Eun
- Issued Date
- 2022-08
- Type
- Article
- DOI
- 10.1021/acs.est.2c01026
- URI
- https://scholar.gist.ac.kr/handle/local/10702
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