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Featured researches published by D. E. Oram.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2017

Biomass burning emissions disturbances on the isoprene oxidation in a tropical forest

Fernando C. Santos; Karla M. Longo; Alex Guenther; Saewung Kim; Dasa Gu; D. E. Oram; G. Forster; James Lee; J. R. Hopkins; Joel Brito; Saulo R. Freitas

We present a characterization of the chemical composition of the atmosphere of the Brazilian Amazon rainforest based on trace gas measurements carried out during the South AMerican Biomass Burning Analysis (SAMBBA) airborne experiment in September 2012. We analyzed the observations of primary biomass burning emission tracers, i.e., carbon monoxide (CO), nitrogen oxides (NOx), ozone (O3), isoprene, and its main oxidation products, methyl vinyl ketone (MVK), methacrolein (MACR), and isoprene hydroxy hydroperoxide (ISOPOOH). The focus of SAMBBA was primarily on biomass burning emissions, but there were also several flights in areas of the Amazon forest not directly affected by biomass burning, revealing a background with a signature of biomass burning in the chemical composition due to long-range transport of biomass burning tracers from both Africa and the eastern part of Amazonia. We used the [MVK+MACR+ ISOPOOH] / [isoprene] ratio and the hydroxyl radical (OH) indirect calculation to assess the oxidative capacity of the Amazon forest atmosphere. We compared the background regions (CO < 150 ppbv), fresh and aged smoke plumes classified according to their photochemical age ([O3] / [CO]), to evaluate the impact of biomass burning emissions on the oxidative capacity of the Amazon forest atmosphere. We observed that biomass burning emissions disturb the isoprene oxidation reactions, especially for fresh plumes ([MVK+MACR+ ISOPOOH] / [isoprene]= 7) downwind. The oxidation of isoprene is higher in fresh smoke plumes at lower altitudes (∼ 500 m) than in aged smoke plumes, anticipating near the surface a complex chain of oxidation reactions which may be related to secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation. We proposed a refinement of the OH calculation based on the sequential reaction model, which considers vertical and horizontal transport for both biomass burning regimes and background environment. Our approach for the [OH] estimation resulted in values on the same order of magnitude of a recent observation in the Amazon rainforest [OH]∼= 106 (molecules cm−3). During the fresh plume regime, the vertical profile of [OH] and the [MVK+MACR+ ISOPOOH] / [isoprene] ratio showed evidence of an increase in the oxidizing power in the transition from planetary boundary layer to cloud layer (1000–1500 m). These high values of [OH] (1.5× 106 molecules cm−3) and [MVK+MACR+ ISOPOOH] / [isoprene] (7.5) indicate a significant change above and inside the cloud decks due to cloud edge effects on photolysis rates, which have a major impact on OH production rates. Published by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union. 12716 F. C. dos Santos et al.: Biomass burning emission disturbances of isoprene oxidation


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2011

Isoprene oxidation mechanisms: measurements and modelling of OH and HO 2 over a South-East Asian tropical rainforest during the OP3 field campaign

D. Stone; M. J. Evans; P. M. Edwards; R. Commane; Trevor Ingham; Andrew R. Rickard; D. M. Brookes; J. R. Hopkins; Roland J. Leigh; A. C. Lewis; Paul S. Monks; D. E. Oram; C. E. Reeves; D. Stewart; Dwayne E. Heard


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2010

HO x observations over West Africa during AMMA: impact of isoprene and NO x

D. Stone; M. J. Evans; R. Commane; Trevor Ingham; C. F. A. Floquet; J. B. McQuaid; D. M. Brookes; Paul S. Monks; R. M. Purvis; J. F. Hamilton; J. R. Hopkins; Jamie Lee; A. C. Lewis; D. Stewart; Jennifer G. Murphy; G. P. Mills; D. E. Oram; C. E. Reeves; Dwayne E. Heard


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2013

Radical chemistry at night: Comparisons between observed and modelled HOx, NO3 and N2O5 during the RONOCO project

D. Stone; M. J. Evans; Hannah Walker; Trevor Ingham; Stewart Vaughan; Bin Ouyang; O. J. Kennedy; Matthew W. McLeod; Roger Jones; J. R. Hopkins; S. Punjabi; Richard T. Lidster; J. F. Hamilton; Jamie Lee; A. C. Lewis; Lucy J. Carpenter; G. Forster; D. E. Oram; C. E. Reeves; S. J.-B. Bauguitte; W. T. Morgan; Hugh Coe; Eleonora Aruffo; Cesare Dari-Salisburgo; Franco Giammaria; P. Di Carlo; Dwayne E. Heard


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2015

Isoprene chemistry in pristine and polluted Amazon environments : Eulerian and Lagrangian model frameworks and the strong bearing they have on our understanding of surface ozone and predictions of rainforest exposure to this priority pollutant

J. G. Levine; A. R. MacKenzie; O. J. Squire; A. T. Archibald; P. T. Griffiths; N. L. Abraham; J. A. Pyle; D. E. Oram; G. Forster; Joel Brito; Jamie Lee; J. R. Hopkins; Alastair C. Lewis; S. J.-B. Bauguitte; C. F. Demarco; P. P. Artaxo; Palmira Messina; J. Lathière; D. A. Hauglustaine; E. House; C. N. Hewitt; E. Nemitz


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2009

Ozone budget in the West African lower troposphere during the AMMA (African Monsoon Multidisciplinary Analysis) campaign

M. Saunois; C. E. Reeves; C. Mari; Jennifer G. Murphy; D. Stewart; G. P. Mills; D. E. Oram; R. M. Purvis


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2013

Corrigendum to "Airborne hydrogen cyanide measurements using a chemical ionisation mass spectrometer for the plume identification of biomass burning forest fires" published in Atmos. Chem. Phys., 13, 9217–9232, 2013

M. Le Breton; Asan Bacak; Jennifer Muller; Sebastian O'Shea; Ping Xiao; M. N. R. Ashfold; Michael Cooke; R. Batt; Dudley E. Shallcross; D. E. Oram; G. Forster; S. J.-B. Bauguitte; Paul I. Palmer; Mark Parrington; A. C. Lewis; Jamie Lee; Carl J. Percival


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2010

Corrigendum to "Overview: oxidant and particle photochemical processes above a south-east Asian tropical rainforest (the OP3 project): introduction, rationale, location characteristics and tools" published in Atmos. Chem. Phys., 10, 169–199, 2010

C. N. Hewitt; Jamie Lee; A. R. MacKenzie; M. P. Barkley; Nicola Carslaw; G. D. Carver; Nick A. Chappell; Hugh Coe; C. G. Collier; R. Commane; Fay Davies; Brian Davison; P. DiCarlo; C. Di Marco; J. R. Dorsey; P. M. Edwards; M. J. Evans; D. Fowler; Kate Furneaux; Martin Gallagher; Alex Guenther; Dwayne E. Heard; Carole Helfter; J. R. Hopkins; Trevor Ingham; M. Irwin; Chris Jones; A. Karunaharan; Ben Langford; A. C. Lewis


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2005

Atmospheric trends of the halon gases from polar firn air

C. E. Reeves; W. T. Sturges; G. A. Sturrock; K. Preston; D. E. Oram; Jakob Schwander; Robert Mulvaney; Jean-Marc Barnola; J. Chappellez


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Modeling the observed tropospheric BrO background: Importance of multiphase chemistry and implications for ozone, OH, and mercury: MODELING THE TROPOSPHERIC BrO BACKGROUND

Johan A. Schmidt; Daniel J. Jacob; H. M. Horowitz; Lu Hu; Tomás Sherwen; M. J. Evans; Qing Liang; R. M. Suleiman; D. E. Oram; M. Le Breton; Carl J. Percival; Siyuan Wang; B. Dix; R. Volkamer

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C. E. Reeves

University of East Anglia

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G. Forster

University of East Anglia

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D. Stewart

University of East Anglia

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