Abstract

Abstract. In this work, we investigate the NOx emissions inventory in Seoul, South Korea, using a regional ozone monitoring instrument (OMI) NO2 product derived from the standard NASA product. We first develop a regional OMI NO2 product by recalculating the air mass factors using a high-resolution (4 km × 4 km) WRF-Chem model simulation, which better captures the NO2 profile shapes in urban regions. We then apply a model-derived spatial averaging kernel to further downscale the retrieval and account for the subpixel variability. These two modifications yield OMI NO2 values in the regional product that are 1.37 times larger in the Seoul metropolitan region and >2 times larger near substantial point sources. These two modifications also yield an OMI NO2 product that is in better agreement with the Pandora NO2 spectrometer measurements acquired during the South Korea–United States Air Quality (KORUS-AQ) field campaign. NOx emissions are then derived for the Seoul metropolitan area during the KORUS-AQ field campaign using a top-down approach with the standard and regional NASA OMI NO2 products. We first apply the top-down approach to a model simulation to ensure that the method is appropriate: the WRF-Chem simulation utilizing the bottom-up emissions inventory yields a NOx emissions rate of 227±94 kt yr−1, while the bottom-up inventory itself within a 40 km radius of Seoul yields a NOx emissions rate of 198 kt yr−1. Using the top-down approach on the regional OMI NO2 product, we derive the NOx emissions rate from Seoul to be 484±201 kt yr−1, and a 353±146 kt yr−1 NOx emissions rate using the standard NASA OMI NO2 product. This suggests an underestimate of 53 % and 36 % in the bottom-up inventory using the regional and standard NASA OMI NO2 products respectively. To supplement this finding, we compare the NO2 and NOy simulated by WRF-Chem to observations of the same quantity acquired by aircraft and find a model underestimate. When NOx emissions in the WRF-Chem model are increased by a factor of 2.13 in the Seoul metropolitan area, there is better agreement with KORUS-AQ aircraft observations and the recalculated OMI NO2 tropospheric columns. Finally, we show that by using a WRF-Chem simulation with an updated emissions inventory to recalculate the air mass factor (AMF), there are small differences (∼8 %) in OMI NO2 compared to using the original WRF-Chem simulation to derive the AMF. This suggests that changes in model resolution have a larger effect on the AMF calculation than modifications to the South Korean emissions inventory. Although the current work is focused on South Korea using OMI, the methodology developed in this work can be applied to other world regions using TROPOMI and future satellite datasets (e.g., GEMS and TEMPO) to produce high-quality region-specific top-down NOx emissions estimates.

Highlights

  • Nitrogen oxides (NOx≡NO+NO2) are a group of reactive trace gases that are toxic to human health and can be converted in the atmosphere into other noxious chemical species

  • We show a regional NASA ozone monitoring instrument (OMI) NO2 satellite product (OMI-regional) using air mass factor (AMF) generated from the WRF-Chem a priori NO2 profiles

  • We compare the OMI-regional product with NO2 vertical column density (VCD) from the original WRF-Chem simulation

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Summary

Introduction

Nitrogen oxides (NOx≡NO+NO2) are a group of reactive trace gases that are toxic to human health and can be converted in the atmosphere into other noxious chemical species. In the presence of abundant volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and strong sunlight, NOx can participate in a series of chemical reactions to generate a net accumulation of O3, another toxic air pollutant with a longer atmospheric lifetime. NOx participates in a series of reactions to create HNO3, a key contributor to acid rain, and particulate nitrate (NO−3 ), a component of fine particulate matter (PM2.5), an additional health hazard. There is a rich legacy of NO2 measurements by remote sensing instruments (Burrows et al, 1999). One of these instruments is the Dutch–Finnish ozone monitoring instrument (OMI), which measures the absorption of solar backscatter in the UV–visible spectral range. By comparing observed spectra with a reference spectrum, the amount of NO2 in the atmosphere between the instrument in low-Earth orbit and the surface can be derived; this technique is called differential optical absorption spectroscopy (DOAS) (Platt, 1994)

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