Atmospheric Environment | 2021

Urban core-downwind differences and relationships related to ozone production in a major urban area in Texas

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract San Antonio, the second-most populous city in Texas and the seventh-most populous city in the United States (US), has been designated a marginal non-attainment area by the US Environmental Protection Agency with respect to the 2015 ozone (O3) National Ambient Air Quality Standard. While stationary air quality monitoring sites are operated in the region by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ), there are limited in situ field measurements for O3 and its precursors in the urban core. To better understand O3 dynamics in San Antonio, a suite of meteorological and gas instruments was deployed during May 2017. We incorporate field measurements from two campaign sites and one TCEQ stationary monitoring site into a zero-dimensional O3 model to characterize the local formation and destruction rates of O3, hydroxyl radical (OH) reactivity of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), O3 production efficiency, and O3 formation regime in the urban core and directly downwind of San Antonio. Upwind/downwind differences indicate the importance of photochemical processing of VOCs with carbon-carbon double bonds. San Antonio was mostly in a nitrogen oxide (NOX)-sensitive regime throughout the daytime during the campaign period, with O3 formation peaking at noon in the city center and early afternoon at the downwind region. Formaldehyde (HCHO), isoprene, and alkenes dominated VOC reactivity, with alkenes and isoprene from San Antonio s core (upwind) likely contributing to the downwind formation of HCHO and enhancing its OH reactivity. However, their direct impact on downwind O3 production was not observed. Model results suggest further strengthening NOX emission controls to decrease O3 formation in San Antonio.

Volume 262
Pages 118624
DOI 10.1016/J.ATMOSENV.2021.118624
Language English
Journal Atmospheric Environment

Full Text