Abstract

Abstract. Asia has attracted research attention because it has the highest anthropogenic emissions in the world, and the Model Inter-Comparison Study for Asia (MICS-Asia) phase III was carried out to foster our understanding of the status of air quality over Asia. This study analyzed wet deposition in southeast Asian countries (Myanmar, Thailand, Lao People's Democratic Republic (PDR), Cambodia, Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, and Indonesia) with the aim of providing insights into the seasonal variation of wet deposition. Southeast Asia was not fully considered in MICS-Asia phase II due to a lack of observational data; however, the analysis period of MICS-Asia III, namely the year 2010, is covered by ground observations of the Acid Deposition Monitoring Network in East Asia (EANET), and the coordinated simulation domain was extended to cover these observation sites. The analyzed species are wet depositions of S (sulfate aerosol, sulfur dioxide (SO2), and sulfuric acid (H2SO4)), N (nitrate aerosol, nitrogen monoxide (NO), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), and nitric acid (HNO3)), and A (ammonium aerosol and ammonia (NH3)). The wet deposition simulated with seven models driven by a unified meteorological model in MICS-Asia III was used with the ensemble approach, which effectively modulates the differences in performance among models. By comparison with EANET observations, although the seven models generally captured the wet depositions of S, N, and A, there were difficulties capturing these in some cases. Considering the model performance for ambient aerosol concentrations over southeast Asia, this failure of models is considered to be related to the difficulty in capturing the precipitation in southeast Asia, especially during the dry and wet seasons. Generally, meteorological fields overestimate the precipitation during the dry season, which leads to the overestimation of wet deposition during this season. To overcome this, a precipitation-adjusted approach that scaled the modeled precipitation to the observed value was applied, and it was demonstrated that the model performance was improved. Satellite measurements were also used to adjust for precipitation data, which adequately accounted for the spatiotemporal precipitation patterns, especially in the dry season. As the statistical scores were mostly improved by this adjustment, the estimation of wet deposition with precipitation adjustment was considered to be superior. To utilize satellite measurements, the spatial distribution of wet deposition was revised. Based on this revision, it was found that Vietnam, Malaysia, and Indonesia were upward corrected, and Myanmar, Thailand, Lao PDR, Cambodia, and the Philippines were downward-corrected; these corrections were up to ±40 %. The improved accuracy of precipitation amount was key to estimating wet deposition in this study. These results suggest that the precipitation-adjusted approach has the potential to obtain accurate estimates of wet deposition through the fusion of models and observations.

Highlights

  • With the recent acceleration of its emission from anthropogenic sources, Asia has the world’s highest acid deposition (Vet et al, 2014)

  • The improved accuracy of precipitation amount was key to estimating wet deposition in this study. These results suggest that the precipitationadjusted approach has the potential to obtain accurate estimates of wet deposition through the fusion of models and observations

  • The results of this study suggest that an approach which applies the precipitation obtained from satellite measurements could be used as one of the methodologies in the Measurement–Model Fusion for Global Total Atmospheric Deposition (MMF-GTAD) project under the Global Atmosphere Watch (GAW) program of the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) (WMO GAW, 2017, 2019)

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Summary

Introduction

With the recent acceleration of its emission from anthropogenic sources, Asia has the world’s highest acid deposition (Vet et al, 2014). 13 countries participate in EANET (EANET, 2020a) This observational study is essential for understanding the status of air quality over Asian countries. Another approach is analysis based on chemical transport models (CTMs), which numerically simulate various processes of air pollutants such as emission, transport, chemical reactions, and deposition. The Model Inter-Comparison Study for Asia (MICSAsia) has been conducted over Asian countries: phase I during 1998–2000 (Carmichael et al, 2002), phase II during 2003–2008 (Carmichael et al, 2008b), and phase III during 2010–2020. Ge et al (2020) analyzed the reactive nitrogen deposition over China, and the results indicated that wet deposition of ammonium aerosol (NH+4 ) was underestimated by all models across China

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