Abstract

Abstract. We interpret HCHO column variations observed by the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI), aboard the NASA Aura satellite, over India during 2014 using the GEOS-Chem atmospheric chemistry and transport model. We use a nested version of the model with a horizontal resolution of approximately 25 km. HCHO columns are related to local emissions of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) with a spatial smearing that increases with the VOC lifetime. Over India, HCHO has biogenic, pyrogenic, and anthropogenic VOC sources. Using a 0-D photochemistry model, we find that isoprene has the largest molar yield of HCHO which is typically realized within a few hours. We also find that forested regions that neighbour major urban conurbations are exposed to high levels of nitrogen oxides. This results in depleted hydroxyl radical concentrations and a delay in the production of HCHO from isoprene oxidation. We find that propene is the only anthropogenic VOC emitted in major Indian cities that produces HCHO at a comparable (but slower) rate to isoprene. The GEOS-Chem model reproduces the broad-scale annual mean HCHO column distribution observed by OMI (r = 0.6), which is dominated by a distinctive meridional gradient in the northern half of the country, and by localized regions of high columns that coincide with forests. Major discrepancies are noted over the Indo-Gangetic Plain (IGP) and Delhi. We find that the model has more skill at reproducing observations during winter (JF) and pre-monsoon (MAM) months with Pearson correlations r > 0.5 but with a positive model bias of ≃ 1×1015 molec cm−2. During the monsoon season (JJAS) we reproduce only a diffuse version of the observed meridional gradient (r = 0.4). We find that on a continental scale most of the HCHO column seasonal cycle is explained by monthly variations in surface temperature (r = 0.9), suggesting a role for biogenic VOCs, in agreement with the 0-D and GEOS-Chem model calculations. We also find that the seasonal cycle during 2014 is not significantly different from the 2008 to 2015 mean seasonal variation. There are two main loci for biomass burning (the states of Punjab and Haryana, and northeastern India), which we find makes a significant contribution (up to 1×1015 molec cm−2) to observed HCHO columns only during March and April over northeastern India. The slow production of HCHO from propene oxidation results in a smeared hotspot over Delhi that we resolve only on an annual mean timescale by using a temporal oversampling method. Using a linear regression model to relate GEOS-Chem isoprene emissions to HCHO columns we infer seasonal isoprene emissions over two key forest regions from the OMI HCHO column data. We find that the a posteriori emissions are typically lower than the a priori emissions, with a much stronger reduction of emissions during the monsoon season. We find that this reduction in emissions during monsoon months coincides with a large drop in satellite observations of leaf phenology that recovers in post monsoon months. This may signal a forest-scale response to monsoon conditions.

Highlights

  • Formaldehyde (HCHO) is an important source of the hydroperoxyl radical (Volkamer et al, 2010; Whalley et al, 2010), and a source of upper tropospheric hydroxyl radicalPublished by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union.L

  • The annual mean Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) distribution of clear-sky HCHO columns is dominated by a distinctive meridional gradient in the northern half of the country, and by localized regions of high columns that coincide with forests

  • We found that the nested GEOS-Chem atmospheric chemistry model reproduces these broad-scale observed features with a positive model bias, over the Indo-Gangetic Plain and Delhi

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Formaldehyde (HCHO) is an important source of the hydroperoxyl radical (Volkamer et al, 2010; Whalley et al, 2010), and a source of upper tropospheric hydroxyl radical. Mahajan et al (2015) showed using coincident satellite measurements of HCHO and NO2 that over much of India O3 production is limited by the availability of nitrogen oxides but over urban regions it is limited by the availability of VOCs, supported by detailed modelling studies over Delhi (Sharma et al, 2016). Our study is focused on India where there are significant sources of biogenic, pyrogenic, and anthropogenic VOCs. The section describes the OMI HCHO column data, the detailed box model used to study the time-dependent production of HCHO from VOC oxidation, and the GEOSChem atmospheric chemistry transport model focused on India.

Data and methods
Models of tropospheric chemistry
Box modelling
GEOS-Chem 3-D modelling
Results
HCHO yield from VOC oxidation in urban and forest environments
Biogenic VOCs from forest environments
Anthropogenic VOC in urban environment
Data filtering and AMF statistics
Annual mean spatial distribution
Seasonal spatial distributions
Biogenic VOCs
Pyrogenic VOCs
Anthropogenic hotspots
Inferring isoprene emissions from OMI HCHO columns
Concluding remarks
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