ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Air Quality Modeling for the Urban Jackson, Mississippi Region Using a High Resolution WRF/Chem Model

Anjaneyulu Yerramilli    
Venkata B. Dodla    
Srinivas Desamsetti    
Srinivas V. Challa    
John H. Young    
Chuck Patrick    
Julius M. Baham    
Robert L. Hughes    
Sudha Yerramilli    
Francis Tuluri    
Mark G. Hardy and Shelton J. Swanier    

Resumen

In this study, an attempt was made to simulate the air quality with reference to ozone over the Jackson (Mississippi) region using an online WRF/Chem (Weather Research and Forecasting?Chemistry) model. The WRF/Chem model has the advantages of the integration of the meteorological and chemistry modules with the same computational grid and same physical parameterizations and includes the feedback between the atmospheric chemistry and physical processes. The model was designed to have three nested domains with the inner-most domain covering the study region with a resolution of 1 km. The model was integrated for 48 hours continuously starting from 0000 UTC of 6 June 2006 and the evolution of surface ozone and other precursor pollutants were analyzed. The model simulated atmospheric flow fields and distributions of NO2 and O3 were evaluated for each of the three different time periods. The GIS based spatial distribution maps for ozone, its precursors NO, NO2, CO and HONO and the back trajectories indicate that all the mobile sources in Jackson, Ridgeland and Madison contributing significantly for their formation. The present study demonstrates the applicability of WRF/Chem model to generate quantitative information at high spatial and temporal resolution for the development of decision support systems for air quality regulatory agencies and health administrators.

Palabras claves

 Artículos similares

       
 
Dorothy L. Robinson, Nigel Goodman and Sotiris Vardoulakis    
Low-cost optical sensors are used in many countries to monitor fine particulate (PM2.5) air pollution, especially in cities and towns with large spatial and temporal variation due to woodsmoke pollution. Previous peer-reviewed research derived calibratio... ver más

 
Dayoung Jung, Youngtae Choe, Jihun Shin, Eunche Kim, Gihong Min, Dongjun Kim, Mansu Cho, Chaekwan Lee, Kilyong Choi, Byung Lyul Woo and Wonho Yang    
The 2014 Time-Use Survey of Statistics Korea revealed that office workers are increasingly spending more than eight hours at work. This study conducted an exposure assessment for office workers in Korea. Indoor and outdoor air pollutants were measured in... ver más

 
Dafydd Phillips    
South Korea is a signatory of the Paris Agreement and has announced its aim to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050. However, South Korea?s current policy trajectory is not compatible with maintaining a global temperature rise below 2 °C. Climate change has... ver más
Revista: Climate

 
Vasilis Evagelopoulos, Nikolaos D. Charisiou, Milton Logothetis, Georgios Evagelopoulos and Christopher Logothetis    
Air quality is important for the protection of human health, the environment and our cultural heritage and it is an issue that will acquire increased significance in the future due to the adverse effects of climate change. Thus, it is important to not si... ver más
Revista: Climate

 
Qirui Zhong and Huizhong Shen    
Revista: Climate