Li X, Brauers T, Shao M, Garland RM, Wagner T, Deutschmann T, Wahner A.
MAX-DOAS measurements in southern China: retrieval of aerosol extinctions and validation using ground-based in-situ data. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics. 2010;10(5):2079-2089.
AbstractWe performed MAX-DOAS measurements during the PRiDe-PRD2006 campaign in the Pearl River Delta region 50 km north of Guangzhou, China, for 4 weeks in June 2006. We used an instrument sampling at 7 different elevation angles between 3° and 90°. During 9 cloud-free days, differential slant column densities (DSCDs) of O4 (O2 dimer) absorptions between 351 nm and 389 nm were evaluated for 6 elevation angles. Here, we show that radiative transfer modeling of the DSCDS can be used to retrieve the aerosol extinction and the height of the boundary layer. A comparison of the aerosol extinction with simultaneously recorded, ground based nephelometer data shows excellent agreement.
Lou S, Holland F, Rohrer F, Lu K, Bohn B, Brauers T, Chang C-C, Fuchs H, Haeseler R, Kita K, et al. Atmospheric OH reactivities in the Pearl River Delta - China in summer 2006: measurement and model results. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics. 2010;10(22):11243-11260.
AbstractTotal atmospheric OH reactivities (k(OH)) have been measured as reciprocal OH lifetimes by a newly developed instrument at a rural site in the densely populated Pearl River Delta (PRD) in Southern China in summer 2006. The deployed technique, LP-LIF, uses laser flash photolysis (LP) for artificial OH generation and laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) to measure the time-dependent OH decay in samples of ambient air. The reactivities observed at PRD covered a range from 10 s(-1) to 120 s(-1), indicating a large load of chemical reactants. On average, k(OH) exhibited a pronounced diurnal profile with a mean maximum value of 50 s(-1) at daybreak and a mean minimum value of 20 s(-1) at noon. The comparison of reactivities calculated from measured trace gases with measured k(OH) reveals a missing reactivity of about a factor of 2 at day and night. The reactivity explained by measured trace gases was dominated by anthropogenic pollutants (e. g., CO, NOx, light alkenes and aromatic hydrocarbons) at night, while it was strongly influenced by local, biogenic emissions of isoprene during the day. Box model calculations initialized by measured parameters reproduce the observed OH reactivity well and suggest that the missing reactivity is contributed by unmeasured, secondary chemistry products (mainly aldehydes and ketones) that were photochemically formed by hydrocarbon oxidation. Overall, k(OH) was dominated by organic compounds, which had a maximum contribution of 85% in the afternoon. The paper demonstrates the usefulness of direct reactivity measurements, emphasizes the need for direct measurements of oxygenated organic compounds in atmospheric chemistry studies, and discusses uncertainties of the modelling of OVOC reactivities.