Abstract

Abstract. Major population centers (MPCs), or megacities, represent the largest of growing urban agglomerations with major societal and environmental implications. In terms of air quality, they are seen as localized but strong emission sources of aerosols and trace gases which in turn affect air pollution levels in the city or in downwind regions. In the state-of-the-art atmospheric chemistry general circulation model EMAC, generic aerosol and gas-phase tracers with equal emission source strengths at 46 MPC locations are used to study the balance between local pollution build-up and pollution export, either vertically into the upper troposphere or horizontally in the lower troposphere. The insoluble gas-phase tracers with fixed lifetimes are transported with the atmospheric circulation, while the aerosol tracers also undergo gravitational sedimentation as well as dry and wet deposition processes. The strength of low-level tracer export depends on the location of the emission source and prevailing meteorology, in particular on atmospheric stability and the height of the boundary layer and the mixing out of this layer. In contrast, vertical transport of tracer mass depends on the tracer's solubility: the more soluble a tracer is, the less mass reaches altitudes above five kilometers. Hence, the mass of insoluble gas-phase tracer above five kilometers can be up to ten times higher than the hydrophilic aerosol mass from the same source. In the case of aerosol tracers, pollution build-up around the source is determined by meteorological factors which have only indirect effects on tracer lifetime, like surface wind, boundary layer height, and turbulent mixing, as well as those which affect the lifetime of the tracers such as precipitation. The longer a tracer stays in the atmosphere, the lower is the relative importance of the location of the source to the atmospheric mass, and thus the lower is the relative local pollution build-up. We further use aerosol deposition fields to estimate regions with high deposition, that is more than 1% or more than 5% of the corresponding tracer emission deposited in this region. In doing so, we find that the high deposition areas are larger for aerosols with diameters of 10.0 μm, and these differ less between the MPCs than for aerosols with diameters smaller than 2.5 μm due to faster deposition. Furthermore, cities in regions with high precipitation rates or unfavorable geographic locations, e.g., in a basin, suffer most of this high deposition. Most of the high deposition occurs over land, although about 50% of the MPCs are located along coastlines. By folding the aerosol deposition fields with geographical distributions of cropland, pasture, and forest, the impact on different land ecosystems is assessed. In general, forest is exposed most to deposition from MPCs while pastureland is least affected. Moreover, the impact on humans, measured with a threshold exceedance of pollutant surface mixing ratios, is more dependent on population densities than on the size of the area with a certain mixing ratio.

Highlights

  • One of the big challeOngecseoaf ntheSfcutiuerencisethe sustainable growth of urban agglomerations

  • The primary focus is on generic aerosol tracers of five different monomodal sizes between 0.1 μm and 10.0 μm and two solubilities with various atmospheric residence times

  • In the atmospheric chemistry general circulation model (AC-GCM) EMAC ten tracers were released at each of the 46 different emission points, i.e., the major population centers considered in this study

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Summary

Introduction

One of the big challeOngecseoaf ntheSfcutiuerencisethe sustainable growth of urban agglomerations. Kunkel et al.: Aerosol pollution potential from major population centers development as well as generation of knowledge, technology, and wealth (Kraas, 2007) They can offer a significant chance for climate mitigation strategies, as the per capita emission is smaller when many people live close together (Parrish et al, 2009). Lawrence et al (2007, later referred to as L07) studied the outflow characteristics of generic gas-phase tracers with three different lifetimes (1, 10, 100 days) from 36 MPCs to obtain insight into the balance between local pollution buildup and long-range transport. They found that low-level export is strongest in middle and high latitudes, while export into the free troposphere is dominant in the tropics. The key conclusions and further open questions are summarized in the last section

Model and major population centers
Meteorological setup
MESSy setup
A B Cs Cw Cf D
Metrics
Agricultural and population data
Model comparison of outflow characteristics from major population centers
Atmospheric dispersion of aerosols from urban emission hotspots
Local pollution build-up
Remote low-level outflow
Outflow into the upper troposphere
A B Cf Cs Cw D All
Relation between pollution build-up and outflow
Aerosol–gas-phase comparison
MPC impact on ecosystems and humans
Impact on land and sea surfaces
Population-based impact
Findings
Summary and conclusions
Full Text
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