Abstract

Abstract. This paper presents a comprehensive description and benchmark evaluation of the tropospheric gas-phase chemistry component of the Multiscale Online Nonhydrostatic AtmospheRe CHemistry model (NMMB-MONARCH), formerly known as NMMB/BSC-CTM, that can be run on both regional and global domains. Here, we provide an extensive evaluation of a global annual cycle simulation using a variety of background surface stations (EMEP, WDCGG and CASTNET), ozonesondes (WOUDC, CMD and SHADOZ), aircraft data (MOZAIC and several campaigns), and satellite observations (SCIAMACHY and MOPITT). We also include an extensive discussion of our results in comparison to other state-of-the-art models. We note that in this study, we omitted aerosol processes and some natural emissions (lightning and volcano emissions). The model shows a realistic oxidative capacity across the globe. The seasonal cycle for CO is fairly well represented at different locations (correlations around 0.3–0.7 in surface concentrations), although concentrations are underestimated in spring and winter in the Northern Hemisphere, and are overestimated throughout the year at 800 and 500 hPa in the Southern Hemisphere. Nitrogen species are well represented in almost all locations, particularly NO2 in Europe (root mean square error – RMSE – below 5 ppb). The modeled vertical distributions of NOx and HNO3 are in excellent agreement with the observed values and the spatial and seasonal trends of tropospheric NO2 columns correspond well to observations from SCIAMACHY, capturing the highly polluted areas and the biomass burning cycle throughout the year. Over Asia, the model underestimates NOx from March to August, probably due to an underestimation of NOx emissions in the region. Overall, the comparison of the modeled CO and NO2 with MOPITT and SCIAMACHY observations emphasizes the need for more accurate emission rates from anthropogenic and biomass burning sources (i.e., specification of temporal variability). The resulting ozone (O3) burden (348 Tg) lies within the range of other state-of-the-art global atmospheric chemistry models. The model generally captures the spatial and seasonal trends of background surface O3 and its vertical distribution. However, the model tends to overestimate O3 throughout the troposphere in several stations. This may be attributed to an overestimation of CO concentration over the Southern Hemisphere leading to an excessive production of O3 or to the lack of specific chemistry (e.g., halogen chemistry, aerosol chemistry). Overall, O3 correlations range between 0.6 and 0.8 for daily mean values. The overall performance of the NMMB-MONARCH is comparable to that of other state-of-the-art global chemistry models.

Highlights

  • Tropospheric ozone (O3) is a radiatively active gas interacting with solar and terrestrial radiation that is mainly produced during the photochemical oxidation of methane (CH4), carbon monoxide (CO) and non-methane volatile organic compounds (NMVOCs) in the presence of nitrogen oxides (NOx) (Crutzen, 1974; Derwent et al, 1996)

  • They include a chemical mechanism for representing gas-phase and aerosol atmospheric chemistry, a photolysis scheme describing the photo-dissociation reactions driven by sunlight, dry and wet deposition schemes to account for the removal of pollutants from the atmosphere, and the characterization of the downward transport of stratospheric O3

  • We describe the gas-phase chemistry of the Multiscale Online Nonhydrostatic AtmospheRe CHemistry model (NMMB-MONARCH), a chemical weather prediction system formerly known as Nonhydrostatic Multiscale Model on the B-grid (NMMB)/BSCCTM that can be run either globally or regionally (Pérez et al, 2011; Jorba et al, 2012)

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Summary

Introduction

Tropospheric ozone (O3) is a radiatively active gas interacting with solar and terrestrial radiation that is mainly produced during the photochemical oxidation of methane (CH4), carbon monoxide (CO) and non-methane volatile organic compounds (NMVOCs) in the presence of nitrogen oxides (NOx) (Crutzen, 1974; Derwent et al, 1996). The systems are being updated and prepared for higher-resolution applications In this contribution, we describe the gas-phase chemistry of the Multiscale Online Nonhydrostatic AtmospheRe CHemistry model (NMMB-MONARCH), a chemical weather prediction system formerly known as NMMB/BSCCTM that can be run either globally or regionally (Pérez et al, 2011; Jorba et al, 2012). The implementation and evaluation of other relevant aerosols will soon be described elsewhere (Spada et al, 2017) This initiative aims at developing a fully coupled chemical multiscale (global/regional) weather prediction system that resolves gas–aerosol–meteorology interactions and provides initial and boundary conditions for embedded high-resolution nests in a unified dynamics–physics– chemistry environment.

Model description
The Nonhydrostatic Multiscale Model on the B-grid
Gas-phase chemistry module
Chemical-phase reaction mechanism
Photolysis scheme
Dry-deposition scheme
Wet-deposition scheme
Upper boundary conditions
Online natural emissions
Model setup
Emissions
Surface concentration and wet deposition
Satellite data
Model evaluation
24 This study
Nitrogen compounds
Conclusions
Findings
Code and data availability
Full Text
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