Abstract
Most modeling studies that examine background ozone concentrations
used global chemical transport models to estimate the magnitude of
hemispheric scale air pollutant transport. It is unclear, however, to
what degree sub-grid scale processes not captured by the coarse
resolution of such models might alter regional estimates of foreign
air pollution impact. This study uses a regional atmospheric
chemistry model (WRF/Chem) to determine which fine-scale processes
have the largest impact on long-range ozone and ozone precursor
transport over the Western United States. We conducted a 36 km x 36
km WRF/Chem simulation for all of April, 2006 using dynamic boundary
conditions supplied by the MOZART global chemical transport model. We
then compare the resultant down-scaled forecasts of ozone and other
atmospheric constituents to the corresponding coarse resolution MOZART
forecasts. We validate both models against the North American
Regional Reanalysis for meteorological accuracy, EPA Air Quality
System surface ozone observations, multiple ozonesondes, and high
resolution/multi-constituent observations made at the Mount Bachelor
Observatory in Bend, OR. Our results indicate that WRF/Chem
overestimates the surface impact of stratospheric intrusions over
orographically complex regions of the inter-mountain West, but that
WRF/Chem accuracy is slightly better than MOZART accuracy where such
intrusions do not impact surface ozone. We conclude by discussing the
implications of our findinigs for future applications of global and
regional atmospheric chemistry models.
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