Abstract

Abstract. The aerosol speciation and size distribution is modeled during the summer 2013 and over a large area encompassing Africa, Mediterranean and western Europe. The modeled aerosol is compared to available measurements such as the AERONET aerosol optical depth (AOD) and aerosol size distribution (ASD) and the EMEP network for surface concentrations of particulate matter PM2.5, PM10 and inorganic species (nitrate, sulfate and ammonium). The main goal of this study is to quantify the model ability to realistically model the speciation and size distribution of the aerosol. Results first showed that the long-range transport pathways are well reproduced and mainly constituted by mineral dust: spatial correlation is ≈ 0.9 for AOD and Ångström exponent, when temporal correlations show that the day-to-day variability is more difficult to reproduce. Over Europe, PM2.5 and PM10 have a mean temporal correlation of ≈ 0.4 but the lowest spatial correlation ( ≈ 0.25 and 0.62, respectively), showing that the fine particles are not well localized or transported. Being short-lived species, the uncertainties on meteorology and emissions induce these lowest scores. However, time series of PM2.5 with the speciation show a good agreement between model and measurements and are useful for discriminating the aerosol composition. Using a classification from the south (Africa) to the north (northern Europe), it is shown that mineral dust relative mass contribution decreases from 50 to 10 % when nitrate increases from 0 to 20 % and all other species, sulfate, sea salt, ammonium, elemental carbon, primary organic matter, are constant. The secondary organic aerosol contribution is between 10 and 20 % with a maximum at the latitude of the Mediterranean Sea (Spanish stations). For inorganic species, it is shown that nitrate, sulfate and ammonium have a mean temporal correlation of 0.25, 0.37 and 0.17, respectively. The spatial correlation is better (0.25, 0.5 and 0.87), showing that the mean values may be biased but the spatial localization of sulfate and ammonium is well reproduced. The size distribution is compared to the AERONET product and it is shown that the model fairly reproduces the main values for the fine and coarse mode. In particular, for the fine mode, the model overestimates the aerosol mass in Africa and underestimates it in Europe.

Highlights

  • For the World Health Organisation (WHO), air pollution is a major environmental risk to health and particulate matter (PM)

  • This is necessary if we want to split the relative contribution of anthropogenic and biogenic parts in the aerosol to be able to adapt and have more efficient rules of air quality (AQ) legislation. This modeling study presents the analysis of a simulation performed with the WRF and CHIMERE models, over a large region including Africa, Mediterranean region and western Europe

  • In order to estimate the model accuracy, the aerosol optical depth (AOD) and AE are compared to the AERONET photometers measurements

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Summary

Introduction

For the World Health Organisation (WHO), air pollution is a major environmental risk to health and particulate matter (PM). The most health-damaging particles are those with a diameter of 10 microns or less (PM10) which can penetrate and lodge deep inside the lungs. PM is responsible for a loss of life expectancy when we consider long-term exposure to PM2.5 (Martinelli et al, 2013). L. Menut et al.: Aerosol speciation and size distribution

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