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Temporal patterns, sources and sinks of (C8-C16) hydrocarbons in the atmosphere of Mace Head, Ireland.

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Standard

Temporal patterns, sources and sinks of (C8-C16) hydrocarbons in the atmosphere of Mace Head, Ireland. / Sartin, J. H.; Halsall, Crispin J.; Robertson, L. A. et al.
In: Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, Vol. 107, No. D19, 04.09.2002.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Sartin, JH, Halsall, CJ, Robertson, LA, Gonard, RG, Mackenzie, AR, Berresheim, H & Hewitt, CN 2002, 'Temporal patterns, sources and sinks of (C8-C16) hydrocarbons in the atmosphere of Mace Head, Ireland.', Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, vol. 107, no. D19. https://doi.org/10.1029/2000JD000232

APA

Sartin, J. H., Halsall, C. J., Robertson, L. A., Gonard, R. G., Mackenzie, A. R., Berresheim, H., & Hewitt, C. N. (2002). Temporal patterns, sources and sinks of (C8-C16) hydrocarbons in the atmosphere of Mace Head, Ireland. Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 107(D19). https://doi.org/10.1029/2000JD000232

Vancouver

Sartin JH, Halsall CJ, Robertson LA, Gonard RG, Mackenzie AR, Berresheim H et al. Temporal patterns, sources and sinks of (C8-C16) hydrocarbons in the atmosphere of Mace Head, Ireland. Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres. 2002 Sept 4;107(D19). doi: 10.1029/2000JD000232

Author

Sartin, J. H. ; Halsall, Crispin J. ; Robertson, L. A. et al. / Temporal patterns, sources and sinks of (C8-C16) hydrocarbons in the atmosphere of Mace Head, Ireland. In: Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres. 2002 ; Vol. 107, No. D19.

Bibtex

@article{4ed88e7dd6fc4ced90ff0b1a0491977e,
title = "Temporal patterns, sources and sinks of (C8-C16) hydrocarbons in the atmosphere of Mace Head, Ireland.",
abstract = "During the 1999 New Particle Formation and Fate in the Coastal Environment (PARFORCE) field campaign, 16 C8-C16 volatile organic compounds (VOCs) were identified in the coastal atmosphere of Mace Head, Ireland. Sampling took place over 24 days, with 12 VOCs routinely quantified. Concentrations were observed in the low <10–150 parts per trillion by volume range, with levels typically in the order of aldehydes > ketones ≥ n-alkanes. Concentrations of these compounds were also measured in shoreline surface seawater. No relationship was observed between atmospheric concentrations and high/low tide events. Many VOCs revealed a temporal pattern in the atmosphere, with highest concentrations measured during the early morning and lowest concentrations in the afternoon. The strongest pattern was observed for the n-alkanes. However, this was dependent on the prevailing air mass direction and the local meteorology. A Lagrangian box model was applied to assess this diurnal cycle, using seawater emissions as a source (based on the seawater concentrations and observed wind speeds), and depletion via OH radicals and dilution by entrainment as sinks (using measured [OH] and boundary layer height data). The model gave good agreement to the observed concentrations for selected air mass types, predicting the daytime decrease in VOC concentrations due to OH radical chemistry and boundary layer growth, and the subsequent increase in VOC concentrations toward evening as both oxidation chemistry diminished and the mixing layer height fell.",
author = "Sartin, {J. H.} and Halsall, {Crispin J.} and Robertson, {L. A.} and Gonard, {R. G.} and Mackenzie, {A. Robert} and H. Berresheim and Hewitt, {C. Nicholas}",
year = "2002",
month = sep,
day = "4",
doi = "10.1029/2000JD000232",
language = "English",
volume = "107",
journal = "Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres",
issn = "0747-7309",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd",
number = "D19",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Temporal patterns, sources and sinks of (C8-C16) hydrocarbons in the atmosphere of Mace Head, Ireland.

AU - Sartin, J. H.

AU - Halsall, Crispin J.

AU - Robertson, L. A.

AU - Gonard, R. G.

AU - Mackenzie, A. Robert

AU - Berresheim, H.

AU - Hewitt, C. Nicholas

PY - 2002/9/4

Y1 - 2002/9/4

N2 - During the 1999 New Particle Formation and Fate in the Coastal Environment (PARFORCE) field campaign, 16 C8-C16 volatile organic compounds (VOCs) were identified in the coastal atmosphere of Mace Head, Ireland. Sampling took place over 24 days, with 12 VOCs routinely quantified. Concentrations were observed in the low <10–150 parts per trillion by volume range, with levels typically in the order of aldehydes > ketones ≥ n-alkanes. Concentrations of these compounds were also measured in shoreline surface seawater. No relationship was observed between atmospheric concentrations and high/low tide events. Many VOCs revealed a temporal pattern in the atmosphere, with highest concentrations measured during the early morning and lowest concentrations in the afternoon. The strongest pattern was observed for the n-alkanes. However, this was dependent on the prevailing air mass direction and the local meteorology. A Lagrangian box model was applied to assess this diurnal cycle, using seawater emissions as a source (based on the seawater concentrations and observed wind speeds), and depletion via OH radicals and dilution by entrainment as sinks (using measured [OH] and boundary layer height data). The model gave good agreement to the observed concentrations for selected air mass types, predicting the daytime decrease in VOC concentrations due to OH radical chemistry and boundary layer growth, and the subsequent increase in VOC concentrations toward evening as both oxidation chemistry diminished and the mixing layer height fell.

AB - During the 1999 New Particle Formation and Fate in the Coastal Environment (PARFORCE) field campaign, 16 C8-C16 volatile organic compounds (VOCs) were identified in the coastal atmosphere of Mace Head, Ireland. Sampling took place over 24 days, with 12 VOCs routinely quantified. Concentrations were observed in the low <10–150 parts per trillion by volume range, with levels typically in the order of aldehydes > ketones ≥ n-alkanes. Concentrations of these compounds were also measured in shoreline surface seawater. No relationship was observed between atmospheric concentrations and high/low tide events. Many VOCs revealed a temporal pattern in the atmosphere, with highest concentrations measured during the early morning and lowest concentrations in the afternoon. The strongest pattern was observed for the n-alkanes. However, this was dependent on the prevailing air mass direction and the local meteorology. A Lagrangian box model was applied to assess this diurnal cycle, using seawater emissions as a source (based on the seawater concentrations and observed wind speeds), and depletion via OH radicals and dilution by entrainment as sinks (using measured [OH] and boundary layer height data). The model gave good agreement to the observed concentrations for selected air mass types, predicting the daytime decrease in VOC concentrations due to OH radical chemistry and boundary layer growth, and the subsequent increase in VOC concentrations toward evening as both oxidation chemistry diminished and the mixing layer height fell.

U2 - 10.1029/2000JD000232

DO - 10.1029/2000JD000232

M3 - Journal article

VL - 107

JO - Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres

JF - Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres

SN - 0747-7309

IS - D19

ER -