Abstract

Abstract. Ozone (O3) in the lower troposphere is harmful to people and plants, particularly during summer, when photochemistry is most active and higher temperatures favor local chemistry. Local precursor emissions, such as those of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and nitrogen oxides (NOx), together with their chemistry contribute to the O3 and NOx mixing ratios in the Houston–Galveston–Brazoria (HGB) region. In addition to local emissions, chemistry and transport, larger-scale factors also contribute to local O3 and NOx. These additional contributions (often referred to as regional background) are not well quantified within the HGB region, impeding more efficient controls on precursor emissions to achieve compliance with the National Ambient Air Quality Standards for O3. In this study, we estimate ground-level regional background O3 and NOx in the HGB region and quantify their decadal-scale trends.We use four different approaches based on principal component analysis (PCA) to quantify background O3 and NOx. Three of these approaches consist of independent PCA on both O3 and NOx for both 1 and 8 h levels to compare our results with previous studies and to highlight the effect of both temporal and spatial scales. In the fourth approach, we co-varied O3, NOx and meteorology.Our results show that the estimation of regional background O3 has less inherent uncertainty when it was constrained by NOx and meteorology, yielding a statistically significant temporal trend of −0.68 ± 0.27 ppb yr−1. Likewise, the estimation of regional background NOx trend constrained by O3 and meteorology was −0.04 ± 0.02 ppb yr−1 (upper bound) and −0.03 ± 0.01 ppb yr−1 (lower bound). Our best estimates of the 17-year average of season-scale background O3 and NOx were 46.72 ± 2.08 ppb and 6.80 ± 0.13 ppb (upper bound) or 4.45 ± 0.08 ppb (lower bound), respectively. Average background O3 is consistent with previous studies and between the approaches used in this study, although the approaches based on 8 h averages likely overestimate background O3 compared to the hourly median approach by 7–9 ppb. Similarly, the upper bound of average background NOx is consistent between approaches in this study (A–C) but overestimated compared to the hourly approach by 1 ppb, on average. We likely overestimate the upper-bound background NOx due to instrument overdetection of NOx and the 8 h averaging of NOx and meteorology coinciding with MDA8 O3.Regional background O3 and NOx in the HGB region both have declined over the past 2 decades. This decline became steadier after 2007, overlapping with the effects of controlling precursor emissions and a prevailing southeasterly–southerly flow.

Highlights

  • In the lower troposphere, ozone (O3) has impacts on both human health and ecosystems (Pusede et al, 2015), and understanding its mechanisms of production is essential to managing these impacts

  • Our results show that the estimation of regional background O3 has less inherent uncertainty when it was constrained by nitrogen oxides (NOx) and meteorology, yielding a statistically significant temporal trend of −0.68 ± 0.27 ppb yr−1

  • We focus on the O3–NOx– meteorology relationship to constrain regional background O3 and NOx and quantify their trends

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Ozone (O3) has impacts on both human health and ecosystems (Pusede et al, 2015), and understanding its mechanisms of production is essential to managing these impacts. Surface O3 is the result of both local and regional contributions when measured at any given location (Berlin et al, 2013). These contributions change in space and time because of dynamic factors that include emis-. Suciu et al.: Regional background O3 and NOx in the Houston–Galveston–Brazoria (TX) region sions of O3 precursors and meteorology. Understanding these contributions is fundamental to the design of more efficient controls on anthropogenic O3 precursors to protect people and ecosystems and to achieve compliance with the National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) for O3

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call