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Featured researches published by James B. Simpas.


Journal of Environmental Monitoring | 2003

Direct measurements of urban OH reactivity during Nashville SOS in summer 1999

T. A. Kovacs; William H. Brune; H. Harder; M. Martinez; James B. Simpas; G. J. Frost; Eric J. Williams; T. Jobson; C. Stroud; V. Young; Alan Fried; B. Wert

Emissions of volatile chemicals control the hydroxyl radical (OH), the atmospheres main cleansing agent, and thus the production of secondary pollutants. Accounting for all of these chemicals can be difficult, especially in environments with mixed urban and forest emissions. The first direct measurements of the atmospheric OH reactivity, the inverse of the OH lifetime, were made as part of the Southern Oxidant Study (SOS) at Cornelia Fort Airpark in Nashville, TN in summer 1999. Measured OH reactivity was typically 11 s(-1). Measured OH reactivity was 1.4 times larger than OH reactivity calculated from the sum of the products of measured chemical concentrations and their OH reaction rate coefficients. This difference is statistically significant at the 1sigma uncertainty level of both the measurements and the calculations but not the 2sigma uncertainty level. Measured OH reactivity was 1.3 times larger than the OH reactivity from a model that uses measured ambient concentrations of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), NO, NO2, SO2, and CO. However, it was within approximately 10% of the OH reactivity from a model that includes hydrocarbon measurements made in a Nashville tunnel and scaled to the ambient CO at Cornelia Fort Airpark. These comparisons indicate that 30% of the OH reactivity in Nashville may come from short-lived highly reactive VOCs that are not usually measured in field intensive studies or by US EPAs Photochemical Assessment Monitoring Stations.


Journal of Atmospheric Chemistry | 2004

Interference testing for atmospheric HOx measurements by laser-induced fluorescence

Xinrong Ren; H. Harder; M. Martinez; Ian C. Faloona; David Tan; Robert Lesher; Piero Di Carlo; James B. Simpas; William H. Brune

Accurate OH and HO2 (collectively called HOx) measurements by laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) may be contaminated by spurious signals from interfering atmospheric chemicals or from the instrument itself. Interference tests must be conducted to ensure that observed OH signal originates solely from ambient OH and is not due to instrument artifacts. Several tests were performed on the Penn State LIF HOx instrument, both in the laboratory and in the field. Theseincluded measurements of the instruments zero signal by using either zero air or perfluoropropylene to remove OH, examination of spectral interferences from naphthalene, sulfur dioxide, and formaldehyde, and tests of interferences by addition of suspected interfering atmospheric chemicals, including ozone, hydrogen peroxide, nitrous acid, formaldehyde, nitric acid, acetone, and organic peroxy radicals (RO2). All tests lacked evidence ofsignificant interferences for measurements in the atmosphere, including highly polluted urban environments.


Atmospheric Environment | 2003

OH and HO2 Chemistry in the urban atmosphere of New York City

Xinrong Ren; H. Harder; M. Martinez; Robert Lesher; Angelique Oliger; James B. Simpas; William H. Brune; James J. Schwab; Kenneth L. Demerjian; Yi He; Xianliang Zhou; Honglian Gao


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2003

OH and HO2 concentrations, sources, and loss rates during the Southern Oxidants Study in Nashville, Tennessee, summer 1999

M. Martinez; H. Harder; T. A. Kovacs; James B. Simpas; Jeremy N. Bassis; Robert Lesher; William H. Brune; G. J. Frost; E. J. Williams; C. A. Stroud; B. T. Jobson; James M. Roberts; Samuel R. Hall; Richard E. Shetter; B. Wert; Alan Fried; B. Alicke; J. Stutz; V. Young; Allen B. White; Robert J. Zamora


Journal of Atmospheric Chemistry | 2004

A Laser-induced Fluorescence Instrument for Detecting Tropospheric OH and HO2: Characteristics and Calibration

Ian C. Faloona; David Tan; Robert Lesher; Nathan L. Hazen; Christopher L. Frame; James B. Simpas; H. Harder; M. Martinez; Piero Di Carlo; Xinrong Ren; William H. Brune


Atmospheric Environment | 2003

HOx concentrations and OH reactivity observations in New York City during PMTACS-NY2001

Xinrong Ren; H. Harder; M. Martinez; Robert Lesher; Angelique Oliger; T. R. Shirley; Jennifer Adams; James B. Simpas; William H. Brune


Atmospheric Environment | 2006

Behavior of OH and HO2 in the winter atmosphere in New York City

Xinrong Ren; William H. Brune; Jingqiu Mao; Michael Mitchell; Robert Lesher; James B. Simpas; Andrew R. Metcalf; James J. Schwab; Chenxia Cai; Yongquan Li; Kenneth L. Demerjian; Henry D. Felton; Garry Boynton; Allen Adams; Jacqueline Perry; Yi He; Xianliang Zhou; Jian Hou


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2006

OH, HO2, and OH reactivity during the PMTACS–NY Whiteface Mountain 2002 campaign: Observations and model comparison

Xinrong Ren; William H. Brune; Angelique Oliger; Andrew R. Metcalf; James B. Simpas; T. R. Shirley; James J. Schwab; Chunhong Bai; Utpal K. Roychowdhury; Yongquan Li; Chenxia Cai; Kenneth L. Demerjian; Yi He; Xianliang Zhou; Honglian Gao; Jian Hou


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2003

In situ observations of ClO near the winter polar tropopause

Brett F. Thornton; D. W. Toohey; Linnea M. Avallone; H. Harder; M. Martinez; James B. Simpas; William H. Brune; Melody A. Avery


Journal of Atmospheric Chemistry | 2004

Interference Testing for Atmospheric HO x Measurements by Laser-induced Fluorescence

Xinrong Ren; H. Harder; M. Martinez; Ian C. Faloona; David Tan; Robert Lesher; Piero Di Carlo; James B. Simpas; William H. Brune

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William H. Brune

Pennsylvania State University

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Robert Lesher

Pennsylvania State University

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Angelique Oliger

Pennsylvania State University

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Brett F. Thornton

University of Colorado Boulder

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D. W. Toohey

University of Colorado Boulder

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Linnea M. Avallone

University of Colorado Boulder

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Xianliang Zhou

New York State Department of Health

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Yi He

State University of New York System

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