Issue 1, 2003

Evaluating a Canadian regional air quality model using ground-based observations in north-eastern Canada and United States

Abstract

The simulated concentrations from a numerical 3-dimensional regional air quality model (MC2AQ) are compared to those of ground-based observations in north-eastern Canada and the United States. The model has oxidant chemistry for both inorganic and organic species and deposition routines driven online by a mesoscale compressible community meteorological model (MC2). A standard emission inventory of anthropogenic, natural and biogenic sources for the year 1990 for 21 atmospheric trace species was used in the simulation. The model was run for July 1999, because of the occurrence of a high ozone episode and the availability of the monitoring data for surface O3, SO2, NO, NO2 and NOx. The comparisons during the episode show that the model performs quite well for predicting concentrations and diurnal variations of the surface ozone. The predictions for other gaseous species show some discrepancies with observations, but they are consistent with the results from other models evaluated in the literature. The uncertainties in the emission inventory for these species might be the main causes of the discrepancies. Further studies are needed to improve the predictability of SO2 and NOx, especially as the model is developed to include particulate matter formation as a result of these gaseous precursors.

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
16 May 2002
Accepted
04 Sep 2002
First published
26 Sep 2002

J. Environ. Monit., 2003,5, 40-46

Evaluating a Canadian regional air quality model using ground-based observations in north-eastern Canada and United States

R. J. Yang, A. G. Xia, D. V. Michelangeli, D. A. Plummer, L. Neary, J. W. Kaminski and J. C. McConnell, J. Environ. Monit., 2003, 5, 40 DOI: 10.1039/B204784P

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