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VOC emission rates over London and South East England obtained by airborne eddy covariance

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VOC emission rates over London and South East England obtained by airborne eddy covariance. / Vaughan, Adam; Lee, James D.; Shaw, Marvin David et al.
In: Faraday Discussions, Vol. 200, 08.2017, p. 599-620.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Vaughan, A, Lee, JD, Shaw, MD, Misztal, P, Metzger, S, Vieno, M, Davison, BM, Karl, T, Carpenter, L, Lewis, AC, Purvis, R, Goldstein, A & Hewitt, CN 2017, 'VOC emission rates over London and South East England obtained by airborne eddy covariance', Faraday Discussions, vol. 200, pp. 599-620. https://doi.org/10.1039/C7FD00002B

APA

Vaughan, A., Lee, J. D., Shaw, M. D., Misztal, P., Metzger, S., Vieno, M., Davison, B. M., Karl, T., Carpenter, L., Lewis, A. C., Purvis, R., Goldstein, A., & Hewitt, C. N. (2017). VOC emission rates over London and South East England obtained by airborne eddy covariance. Faraday Discussions, 200, 599-620. https://doi.org/10.1039/C7FD00002B

Vancouver

Vaughan A, Lee JD, Shaw MD, Misztal P, Metzger S, Vieno M et al. VOC emission rates over London and South East England obtained by airborne eddy covariance. Faraday Discussions. 2017 Aug;200:599-620. Epub 2017 Feb 3. doi: 10.1039/C7FD00002B

Author

Vaughan, Adam ; Lee, James D. ; Shaw, Marvin David et al. / VOC emission rates over London and South East England obtained by airborne eddy covariance. In: Faraday Discussions. 2017 ; Vol. 200. pp. 599-620.

Bibtex

@article{533d0426d18641fb8de2cfd5c54d1e12,
title = "VOC emission rates over London and South East England obtained by airborne eddy covariance",
abstract = "Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) originate from a variety of sources, and play an intrinsic role in influencing air quality. Some VOCs, including benzene, are carcinogens and so directly affect human health, while others, such as isoprene, are very reactive in the atmosphere and play an important role in the formation of secondary pollutants such as ozone and particles. Here we report spatially-resolved measurements of the surface-to-atmosphere fluxes of VOCs across London and SE England made in 2013 and 2014. High-frequency 3-D wind velocities and VOC volume mixing ratios (made by proton transfer reaction - mass spectrometry) were obtained from a low-flying aircraft and used to calculate fluxes using the technique of eddy covariance. A footprint model was then used to quantify the flux contribution from the ground surface at spatial resolution of 100 m, averaged to 1 km. Measured fluxes of benzene over Greater London showed positive agreement with the UK{\textquoteright}s National Atmospheric Emissions Inventory, with the highest fluxes originating from central London. Comparison of MTBE and toluene fluxes suggest that petroleum evaporation is an important emission source of toluene in central London. Outside London, increased isoprene emissions were observed over wooded areas, at rates greater than those predicted by a UK regional application of the European Monitoring and Evaluation Programme model (EMEP4UK). This work demonstrates the applicability of the airborne eddy covariance method to the determination of anthropogenic and biogenic VOC fluxes and the possibility of validating emission inventories through measurements.",
author = "Adam Vaughan and Lee, {James D.} and Shaw, {Marvin David} and Pawel Misztal and Stefan Metzger and Massimo Vieno and Davison, {Brian Matthew} and Thomas Karl and Lucy Carpenter and Lewis, {Alastair C.} and Ruth Purvis and Allen Goldstein and Hewitt, {C N.}",
year = "2017",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1039/C7FD00002B",
language = "English",
volume = "200",
pages = "599--620",
journal = "Faraday Discussions",
issn = "1359-6640",
publisher = "ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - VOC emission rates over London and South East England obtained by airborne eddy covariance

AU - Vaughan, Adam

AU - Lee, James D.

AU - Shaw, Marvin David

AU - Misztal, Pawel

AU - Metzger, Stefan

AU - Vieno, Massimo

AU - Davison, Brian Matthew

AU - Karl, Thomas

AU - Carpenter, Lucy

AU - Lewis, Alastair C.

AU - Purvis, Ruth

AU - Goldstein, Allen

AU - Hewitt, C N.

PY - 2017/8

Y1 - 2017/8

N2 - Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) originate from a variety of sources, and play an intrinsic role in influencing air quality. Some VOCs, including benzene, are carcinogens and so directly affect human health, while others, such as isoprene, are very reactive in the atmosphere and play an important role in the formation of secondary pollutants such as ozone and particles. Here we report spatially-resolved measurements of the surface-to-atmosphere fluxes of VOCs across London and SE England made in 2013 and 2014. High-frequency 3-D wind velocities and VOC volume mixing ratios (made by proton transfer reaction - mass spectrometry) were obtained from a low-flying aircraft and used to calculate fluxes using the technique of eddy covariance. A footprint model was then used to quantify the flux contribution from the ground surface at spatial resolution of 100 m, averaged to 1 km. Measured fluxes of benzene over Greater London showed positive agreement with the UK’s National Atmospheric Emissions Inventory, with the highest fluxes originating from central London. Comparison of MTBE and toluene fluxes suggest that petroleum evaporation is an important emission source of toluene in central London. Outside London, increased isoprene emissions were observed over wooded areas, at rates greater than those predicted by a UK regional application of the European Monitoring and Evaluation Programme model (EMEP4UK). This work demonstrates the applicability of the airborne eddy covariance method to the determination of anthropogenic and biogenic VOC fluxes and the possibility of validating emission inventories through measurements.

AB - Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) originate from a variety of sources, and play an intrinsic role in influencing air quality. Some VOCs, including benzene, are carcinogens and so directly affect human health, while others, such as isoprene, are very reactive in the atmosphere and play an important role in the formation of secondary pollutants such as ozone and particles. Here we report spatially-resolved measurements of the surface-to-atmosphere fluxes of VOCs across London and SE England made in 2013 and 2014. High-frequency 3-D wind velocities and VOC volume mixing ratios (made by proton transfer reaction - mass spectrometry) were obtained from a low-flying aircraft and used to calculate fluxes using the technique of eddy covariance. A footprint model was then used to quantify the flux contribution from the ground surface at spatial resolution of 100 m, averaged to 1 km. Measured fluxes of benzene over Greater London showed positive agreement with the UK’s National Atmospheric Emissions Inventory, with the highest fluxes originating from central London. Comparison of MTBE and toluene fluxes suggest that petroleum evaporation is an important emission source of toluene in central London. Outside London, increased isoprene emissions were observed over wooded areas, at rates greater than those predicted by a UK regional application of the European Monitoring and Evaluation Programme model (EMEP4UK). This work demonstrates the applicability of the airborne eddy covariance method to the determination of anthropogenic and biogenic VOC fluxes and the possibility of validating emission inventories through measurements.

U2 - 10.1039/C7FD00002B

DO - 10.1039/C7FD00002B

M3 - Journal article

VL - 200

SP - 599

EP - 620

JO - Faraday Discussions

JF - Faraday Discussions

SN - 1359-6640

ER -