Abstract
Abstract. This study examined the impacts of aircraft emissions during the landing and takeoff cycle on PM2.5 concentrations during the months of June and July 2002 at the Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport. Primary and secondary pollutants were modeled using the Advanced Modeling System for Transport, Emissions, Reactions, and Deposition of Atmospheric Matter (AMSTERDAM). AMSTERDAM is a modified version of the Community Multiscale Air Quality (CMAQ) model that incorporates a plume-in-grid process to simulate emissions sources of interest at a finer scale than can be achieved using CMAQ's model grid. Three fundamental issues were investigated: the effects of aircraft on PM2.5 concentrations throughout northern Georgia, the differences resulting from use of AMSTERDAM's plume-in-grid process rather than a traditional CMAQ simulation, and the concentrations observed in aircraft plumes at subgrid scales. Comparison of model results with an air quality monitor located in the vicinity of the airport found that normalized mean bias ranges from −77.5% to 6.2% and normalized mean error ranges from 40.4% to 77.5%, varying by species. Aircraft influence average PM2.5 concentrations by up to 0.232 μg m−3 near the airport and by 0.001–0.007 μg m−3 throughout the Atlanta metro area. The plume-in-grid process increases concentrations of secondary PM pollutants by 0.005–0.020 μg m−3 (compared to the traditional grid-based treatment) but reduces the concentration of non-reactive primary PM pollutants by up to 0.010 μg m−3, with changes concentrated near the airport. Examination of subgrid-scale results indicates that median aircraft contribution to grid cells is higher than median puff concentration in the airport's grid cell and outside of a 20 km × 20 km square area centered on the airport, while in a 12 km × 12 km square ring centered on the airport, puffs have median concentrations over an order of magnitude higher than aircraft contribution to the grid cells. Maximum puff impacts are seen within the 12 km × 12 km ring, not in the airport's own grid cell, while maximum grid cell impacts occur within the airport's grid cell. Twenty-one (21)% of all aircraft-related puffs from the Atlanta airport have at least 0.1 μg m−3 PM2.5 concentrations. Near the airport, median daily puff concentrations vary between 0.017 and 0.134 μg m−3 (0.05 and 0.35 μg m−3 at ground level), while maximum daily puff concentrations vary between 6.1 and 42.1 μg m−3 (7.5 and 42.1 μg m−3 at ground level) during the 2-month period. In contrast, median daily aircraft contribution to grid concentrations varies between 0.015 and 0.091 μg m−3 (0.09 and 0.40 μg m−3 at ground level), while the maximum varies between 0.75 and 2.55 μg m−3 (0.75 and 2.0 μg m−3 at ground level). Future researchers may consider using a plume-in-grid process, such as the one used here, to understand the impacts of aircraft emissions at other airports, for proposed future airports, for airport expansion projects under various future scenarios, and for other national-scale studies specifically when the maximum impacts at fine scales are of interest.
Highlights
The Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport is the busiest airport in the world in terms of passenger traffic (Airports Council International, 2010)
We represent airplane traffic from landing and takeoff as a series of emitters near the airport, the first application that we are aware of to use a plume-in-grid model to represent moving, elevated sources. (Kraabøl et al (2000, 2002) used the results of a plume model to modify the production and loss terms for eleven compounds in grid cells corresponding to airplane flight paths in a gridded air quality model, but the two models were used in series and their approach greatly differed from the present study.)
Model performance was evaluated by comparing our results to measurements from the Chemical Speciation Network (CSN), which reports results as a 24 h average every third day
Summary
The Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport is the busiest airport in the world in terms of passenger traffic (Airports Council International, 2010) Major airports such as Atlanta Hartsfield can be important economic drivers in their regions and key transit hubs for people worldwide. Fixed-grid (Eulerian) models are used to represent the effects of dispersed pollutant sources on air quality, but they lack the resolution to distinguish impacts near a major point source. Plume (Lagrangian) models represent pollutants as moving puffs to allow for better representation of impacts near a large point source and for chemical processing within a highly polluted plume. We apply an Eulerian model with plume-in-grid capabilities to assess the effects of aircraft emissions on air quality near the airport and over a larger region. We represent airplane traffic from landing and takeoff as a series of emitters near the airport, the first application that we are aware of to use a plume-in-grid model to represent moving, elevated sources. (Kraabøl et al (2000, 2002) used the results of a plume model to modify the production and loss terms for eleven compounds in grid cells corresponding to airplane flight paths in a gridded air quality model, but the two models were used in series and their approach greatly differed from the present study.)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.