Global impact of road traffic emissions on tropospheric ozone

International audience Road traffic is one of the major anthropogenic emission sectors for NO x , CO and NMHCs (non-methane hydrocarbons). We applied ECHAM4/CBM, a general circulation model coupled to a chemistry module, which includes higher hydrocarbons, to investigate the global impact of road tr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Matthes, S., Grewe, V., Sausen, R., Roelofs, G.-J.
Other Authors: DLR Institut für Physik der Atmosphäre (IPA), Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt Oberpfaffenhofen-Wessling (DLR), Institut for Marine Research
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: HAL CCSD 2005
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Online Access:https://hal.science/hal-00301866
https://hal.science/hal-00301866/document
https://hal.science/hal-00301866/file/acpd-5-10339-2005.pdf
Description
Summary:International audience Road traffic is one of the major anthropogenic emission sectors for NO x , CO and NMHCs (non-methane hydrocarbons). We applied ECHAM4/CBM, a general circulation model coupled to a chemistry module, which includes higher hydrocarbons, to investigate the global impact of road traffic emissions on the atmosphere. Improving over previous global modelling studies, which concentrated on road traffic NO x and CO-emissions only, we assess the impact of NMHC-emissions from road traffic. It is revealed that NMHC-emissions from road traffic play a key role for the impact on ozone. They are responsible for (indirect) long-range transport of NO x from road traffic via the formation of PAN, which is not found in a simulation without NMHC emissions from road traffic. Long-range transport of NMHC-induced PAN impacts on the ozone distribution in northern hemisphere regions far away from the sources, especially in Arctic and remote maritime regions. There, during subsidence, PAN acts as a source for NO x , caused by thermal decay. Hence, ozone is produced. In July total road traffic emissions (NO x , CO and NMHCs) contribute to the zonally averaged ozone distribution by more than 12% near the surface in the northern hemisphere midlatitudes and arctic latitudes. In January road traffic emissions contribute near the surface in northern and southern extratropics more than 8%. Sensitivity studies for regional emission show that effective transport of road traffic emissions occurs mainly in the free troposphere. In tropical latitudes of America up to an altitude of 200 hPa, global road traffic emissions contribute about 4% to the ozone concentration.