Abstract

Abstract. Interactions between aerosols and gases in the atmosphere have been the focus of an increasing number of studies in recent years. Here, we focus on aerosol effects on tropospheric ozone that involve meteorological feedbacks induced by aerosol–radiation interactions. Specifically, we study the effects that involve aerosol influences on the transport of gaseous pollutants and on atmospheric moisture, both of which can impact ozone chemistry. For this purpose, we use the UK Earth System Model (UKESM1), with which we performed sensitivity simulations including and excluding the aerosol direct radiative effect (ADE) on atmospheric chemistry, and focused our analysis on an area with a high aerosol presence, namely China. By comparing the simulations, we found that ADE reduced shortwave radiation by 11 % in China and consequently led to lower turbulent kinetic energy, weaker horizontal winds and a shallower boundary layer (with a maximum of 102.28 m reduction in north China). On the one hand, the suppressed boundary layer limited the export and diffusion of pollutants and increased the concentration of CO, SO2, NO, NO2, PM2.5 and PM10 in the aerosol-rich regions. The NO/NO2 ratio generally increased and led to more ozone depletion. On the other hand, the boundary layer top acted as a barrier that trapped moisture at lower altitudes and reduced the moisture at higher altitudes (the specific humidity was reduced by 1.69 % at 1493 m on average in China). Due to reduced water vapour, fewer clouds were formed and more sunlight reached the surface, so the photolytical production of ozone increased. Under the combined effect of the two meteorology feedback methods, the annual average ozone concentration in China declined by 2.01 ppb (6.2 %), which was found to bring the model into closer agreement with surface ozone measurements from different parts of China.

Highlights

  • Atmospheric aerosols could change the Earth’s radiation budget by scattering and absorbing the incoming solar radiation, which is known as the aerosol direct radiative effect (ADE; Myhre et al, 2013)

  • In this paper, we exclude the impact of heterogeneous reactions and direct photochemical or microphysical effects and focus on the combined effect of ADE-POL and ADE-MOI, i.e. the meteorological feedback, on tropospheric ozone

  • Under the clean air policies, the SO2 emission has declined by 62 % during 2010–2017 (Zheng et al, 2018), but the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6) emissions do not capture this reduction, with 2014 SO2 emissions being higher by 48 % when compared to the region-specific Multiresolution Emission Inventory for China (MEIC) (Paulot et al, 2018)

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Summary

Introduction

Atmospheric aerosols could change the Earth’s radiation budget by scattering and absorbing the incoming solar radiation, which is known as the aerosol direct radiative effect (ADE; Myhre et al, 2013). Scattering aerosols, such as sulfate, nitrate, organic carbon and sea salt, reflect shortwave radiation and lead to negative radiative forcing (Choi and Chung, 2014; Hollaway et al, 2019), while absorbing aerosols, such as black carbon (BC) and dust, absorb sunlight and lead to positive radiative forcing at the top of the atmosphere. The higher number but smaller size of cloud droplets mean de-

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