Abstract

Abstract. Geostationary satellite measurements of aerosol optical depth (AOD) over East Asia from the Geostationary Ocean Color Imager (GOCI) and Advanced Himawari Imager (AHI) instruments can augment surface monitoring of fine particulate matter (PM2.5) air quality, but this requires better understanding of the AOD–PM2.5 relationship. Here we use the GEOS-Chem chemical transport model to analyze the critical variables determining the AOD–PM2.5 relationship over East Asia by simulation of observations from satellite, aircraft, and ground-based datasets. This includes the detailed vertical aerosol profiling over South Korea from the KORUS-AQ aircraft campaign (May–June 2016) with concurrent ground-based PM2.5 composition, PM10, and AERONET AOD measurements. The KORUS-AQ data show that 550 nm AOD is mainly contributed by sulfate–nitrate–ammonium (SNA) and organic aerosols in the planetary boundary layer (PBL), despite large dust concentrations in the free troposphere, reflecting the optically effective size and high hygroscopicity of the PBL aerosols. We updated SNA and organic aerosol size distributions in GEOS-Chem to represent aerosol optical properties over East Asia by using in situ measurements of particle size distributions from KORUS-AQ. We find that SNA and organic aerosols over East Asia have larger size (number median radius of 0.11 µm with geometric standard deviation of 1.4) and 20 % larger mass extinction efficiency as compared to aerosols over North America (default setting in GEOS-Chem). Although GEOS-Chem is successful in reproducing the KORUS-AQ vertical profiles of aerosol mass, its ability to link AOD to PM2.5 is limited by under-accounting of coarse PM and by a large overestimate of nighttime PM2.5 nitrate. The GOCI–AHI AOD data over East Asia in different seasons show agreement with AERONET AODs and a spatial distribution consistent with surface PM2.5 network data. The AOD observations over North China show a summer maximum and winter minimum, opposite in phase to surface PM2.5. This is due to low PBL depths compounded by high residential coal emissions in winter and high relative humidity (RH) in summer. Seasonality of AOD and PM2.5 over South Korea is much weaker, reflecting weaker variation in PBL depth and lack of residential coal emissions.

Highlights

  • PM2.5 in surface air is a severe public health concern in East Asia, but surface monitoring networks are too sparse to thoroughly assess population exposure

  • We evaluate the capability of the GEOSChem chemical transport model (CTM) to simulate aerosol optical depth (AOD)– PM2.5 relationships over East Asia, exploiting in situ aircraft measurements of vertical aerosol profiles and optical properties from the joint NASA–NIER Korea–United States Air Quality (KORUS-AQ) field study in May–June 2016 (Crawford et al, 2021; Peterson et al, 2019; Jordan et al, 2020) together with Geostationary Ocean Color Imager (GOCI)–Advanced Himawari Imager (AHI) geostationary satellite data and surface measurement networks

  • We analyzed the ability of the GEOS-Chem chemical transport model to provide this relationship by using a new fused GOCI–AHI geostationary satellite product together with AERONET ground-based AOD measurements, aerosol vertical profiles over South Korea from the KORUS

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Summary

Introduction

PM2.5 (particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter less than 2.5 μm) in surface air is a severe public health concern in East Asia, but surface monitoring networks are too sparse to thoroughly assess population exposure. We evaluate the capability of the GEOSChem chemical transport model (CTM) to simulate AOD– PM2.5 relationships over East Asia, exploiting in situ aircraft measurements of vertical aerosol profiles and optical properties from the joint NASA–NIER Korea–United States Air Quality (KORUS-AQ) field study in May–June 2016 (Crawford et al, 2021; Peterson et al, 2019; Jordan et al, 2020) together with GOCI–AHI geostationary satellite data and surface measurement networks. This enables us to identify critical variables and uncertainties for inferring PM2.5 from satellite AOD data. Coarse anthropogenic PM (distinct from desert dust) is known to be high over East Asia (Chen et al, 2015; Dai et al, 2018)

Observations
GEOS-Chem simulation
AOD simulation
Aerosol concentrations and optical properties during KORUS-AQ
Vertical profile of aerosol mass
Aerosol size distributions
Aerosol extinction and relation to AOD
AOD and surface particulate matter over South Korea during KORUS-AQ
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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