Modeling organic aerosols in a megacity: Comparison of simple and complex representations of the volatility basis set approach

The Weather Research and Forecasting model coupled with chemistry (WRF-Chem) is modified to include a volatility basis set (VBS) treatment of secondary organic aerosol formation. The VBS approach, coupled with SAPRC-99 gas-phase chemistry mechanism, is used to model gas-particle partitioning and multiple generations of gas-phase oxidation of organic vapors. In addition to the detailed 9-species VBS, a simplified mechanism using 2 volatility species (2-species VBS) is developed and tested for similarity to the 9-species VBS in terms of both mass and oxygen-to-carbon ratios of organic aerosols in the atmosphere. WRF-Chem results are evaluated against field measurements of organic aerosols collected during the MILAGRO 2006 campaign in the vicinity of Mexico City. The simplified 2-species mechanism reduces the computational cost by a factor of 2 as compared to 9-species VBS. Both ground site and aircraft measurements suggest that the 9-species and 2-species VBS predictions of total organic aerosol mass as well as individual organic aerosol components including primary, secondary, and biomass burning are comparable in magnitude. In addition, oxygen-to-carbon ratio predictions from both approaches agree within 25 %, providing evidence that the 2-species VBS is well suited to represent the complex evolution of organic aerosols. Model sensitivity to amount of anthropogenic semi-volatile and intermediate volatility (S/IVOC) precursor emissions is also examined by doubling the default emissions. Both the emission cases significantly under-predict primary organic aerosols in the city center and along aircraft flight transects. Secondary organic aerosols are predicted reasonably well along flight tracks surrounding the city, but are consistently over-predicted downwind of the city. Also, oxygen-to-carbon ratio predictions are significantly improved compared to prior studies by adding 15 % oxygen mass per generation of oxidation; however, all modeling cases still under-predict these ratios downwind as compared to measurements, suggesting a need to further improve chemistry parameterizations of secondary organic aerosol formation.

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Copyright Author(s) 2012. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.


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Author Shrivastava, M.
Fast, J.
Easter, R.
Gustafson, W.
Zaveri, Rahul
Jimenez, J.
Saide, P.
Hodzic, Alma
Publisher UCAR/NCAR - Library
Publication Date 2011-07-13T00:00:00
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Topic Category geoscientificInformation
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Metadata Date 2025-07-17T14:46:46.857915
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:11690
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation Shrivastava, M., Fast, J., Easter, R., Gustafson, W., Zaveri, Rahul, Jimenez, J., Saide, P., Hodzic, Alma. (2011). Modeling organic aerosols in a megacity: Comparison of simple and complex representations of the volatility basis set approach. UCAR/NCAR - Library. https://n2t.org/ark:/85065/d7sq911s. Accessed 01 August 2025.

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