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Dive into the research topics where Jennifer G. Murphy is active.

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Featured researches published by Jennifer G. Murphy.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012

Formation and growth of ultrafine particles from secondary sources in Bakersfield, California

Lars Ahlm; Shang Liu; Douglas A. Day; Lynn M. Russell; R. J. Weber; D. R. Gentner; Allen H. Goldstein; Josh P. DiGangi; S. B. Henry; Frank N. Keutsch; Trevor C. VandenBoer; Milos Z. Markovic; Jennifer G. Murphy; Xinrong Ren; Scott Scheller

carbon (EC) and the AMS tracer C4H9 for hydrocarbon-like organic aerosol (HOA) peaked in the early morning during rush hour, indicative of primary emissions. The fact that the particle number concentration peaked in the afternoon, when EC was at minimum, indicates that the midday increase in number concentration was likely due to new particle formation. The potential importance of solar radiation, the condensation sink of vapor on existing particles, concentrations of OH, O3 ,S O2 ,N H3, and VOCs for both condensational growth and new particle formation is evaluated based on the covariation of these parameters with ultrafine mass. The results suggest that the ultrafine particles are from secondary sources that are co-emitted or co-produced with glyoxal and formaldehyde.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

An investigation of ammonia and inorganic particulate matter in California during the CalNex campaign

Luke D. Schiferl; Colette L. Heald; J. B. Nowak; John S. Holloway; J. Andrew Neuman; R. Bahreini; Ilana B. Pollack; Thomas B. Ryerson; Christine Wiedinmyer; Jennifer G. Murphy

Airborne observations from the California Research at the Nexus of Air Quality and Climate Change (CalNex) campaign in May and June 2010 are used to investigate the role of ammonia (NH3) in fine particulate matter (PM2.5) formation and surface air quality in California and test the key processes relevant to inorganic aerosol formation in the GEOS-Chem model. Concentrations of ammonia throughout California, sulfur dioxide (SO2) in the Central Valley, and ammonium nitrate in the Los Angeles (LA) area are underestimated several-fold in the model. We find that model concentrations are relatively insensitive to uncertainties in gas-particle partitioning and deposition processes in the region. Conversely, increases to anthropogenic livestock ammonia emissions (by a factor of 5) and anthropogenic sulfur dioxide emissions in the Central Valley (by a factor of 3–10) and a reduction of anthropogenic NOx emissions (by 30%) substantially reduce the bias in the simulation of gases (SO2, NH3, HNO3) throughout California and PM2.5 near LA, although the exact magnitudes of emissions in the region remain uncertain. Using these modified emissions, we investigate year-round PM2.5 air quality in California. The model reproduces the wintertime maximum in surface ammonium nitrate concentrations in the Central Valley (regional mean concentrations are three times higher in December than in June), associated with lower planetary boundary layer heights and colder temperatures, and the wintertime minimum in the LA region (regional mean concentrations are two times higher in June than December) associated with ammonia limitation. Year round, we attribute at least 50% of the inorganic PM2.5 mass simulated throughout California to anthropogenic ammonia emissions.


Journal of Environmental Monitoring | 2012

Characterization and optimization of an online system for the simultaneous measurement of atmospheric water-soluble constituents in the gas and particle phases

Milos Z. Markovic; Trevor C. VandenBoer; Jennifer G. Murphy

In this work we present the results of extensive characterization and optimization of the Ambient Ion Monitor-Ion Chromatograph (AIM-IC) system, an instrument developed by URG Corp. and Dionex Inc. for simultaneous hourly measurements of the water-soluble chemical composition of atmospheric fine particulate matter (PM(2.5)) and associated precursor gases. The sampling assembly of the AIM-IC consists of an inertial particle size-selection assembly, a parallel-plate wet denuder (PPWD) for the collection of soluble gases, and a particle supersaturation chamber (PSSC) for collection of particles, in series. The analytical assembly of the AIM-IC consists of anion and cation IC units. The system detection limits were determined to be 41 ppt, 5 ppt, and 65 ppt for gas phase NH(3(g)), SO(2(g)), and HNO(3(g)) and 29 ng m(-3), 3 ng m(-3), and 45 ng m(-3) for particle phase NH(4)(+), SO(4)(2-), and NO(3)(-) respectively. From external trace gas calibrations with permeation sources, we determined that the AIM-IC is biased low for NH(3(g)) (11%), SO(2(g)) (19%), and HNO(3(g)) (12%). The collection efficiency of SO(2(g)) was found to strongly depend on the composition of the denuder solution and was found to be the most quantitative with 5 mM H(2)O(2) solution for mixing ratios as high as 107 ppb. Using a cellulose membrane in the PPWD, the system responded to changes in SO(2(g)) and HNO(3(g)) within an hour, however for NH(3(g)), the timescale can be closer to 20 h. With a nylon membrane, the instrument response time for NH(3(g)) was significantly improved, becoming comparable to the responses for SO(2(g)) and HNO(3(g)). Performance of the AIM-IC for collection and analysis of PM(2.5) was evaluated by generating known number concentrations of ammonium sulfate and ammonium nitrate particles (with an aerodynamic diameter of 300 nm) under laboratory conditions and by comparing AIM-IC measurements to measurements from a collocated Aerosol Mass Spectrometer (AMS) during a field-sampling campaign. On average, the AIM-IC and AMS measurements agreed well and captured rapid ambient concentration changes at the same time. In this work we also present a novel inlet configuration and plumbing for the AIM-IC which minimizes sampling inlet losses, reduces peak smearing due to sample carryover, and allows for tower-height sampling from the base of a research tower.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010

Impact of mesoscale vegetation heterogeneities on the dynamical and thermodynamic properties of the planetary boundary layer

Luis Garcia-Carreras; Douglas J. Parker; Christopher M. Taylor; C. E. Reeves; Jennifer G. Murphy

This study uses aircraft observations over the Republic of Benin from the African Monsoon Multidisciplinary Analyses (AMMA) campaign to investigate the impact of vegetation heterogeneities on the dynamics within the planetary boundary layer, such as convection, transport, and mixing. Isoprene, a biogenic volatile organic compound emitted primarily by woody vegetation, was used as a tracer for transport to link the land surface to the boundary layer properties. Associated to planetary boundary layer (PBL) temperature gradients at vegetation boundaries, a persistent mesoscale organization of the winds which controlled patterns in the formation of cumulus congestus clouds was observed. A strong relationship among PBL temperatures, meridional wind velocity, isoprene concentrations, and fraction of forest or shrub cover was found, corroborating the land surface forcing of the observed dynamics. The observations show that the convergence zones tended to occur on the southern edge of warm surface and atmospheric anomalies. The northerly synoptic wind appears to have increased the coherency of the southerly part of the mesoscale flow and displaced the convergence zones southward. The relationships between the PBL potential temperatures and the meridional wind and isoprene concentrations were spatially coherent down to wavelengths of 10 and 8 km, respectively. A seasonal climatology of visible satellite data shows enhanced cloud cover in the afternoon over cropland, suggesting that the results presented are not limited to this case study but are of climatological significance in the region.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Fine-scale simulation of ammonium and nitrate over the South Coast Air Basin and San Joaquin Valley of California during CalNex-2010

James T. Kelly; Kirk R. Baker; J. B. Nowak; Jennifer G. Murphy; Milos Z. Markovic; Trevor C. VandenBoer; R. A. Ellis; J. Andrew Neuman; Rodney J. Weber; James M. Roberts; P. R. Veres; Joost A. de Gouw; Melinda R. Beaver; Sally Newman; Chris Misenis

National ambient air quality standards (NAAQS) have been set for PM_2.5 due to its association with adverse health effects. PM_2.5 design values in the South Coast Air Basin (SoCAB) and San Joaquin Valley of California exceed NAAQS levels, and NH^(+)_(4) and NO^(-)_(3) make up the largest fraction of total PM2.5 mass on polluted days. Here we evaluate fine-scale simulations of PM_(2.5) NH^(+)_(4) and NO^(-)_(3) with the Community Multiscale Air Quality model using measurements from routine networks and the California Research at the Nexus of Air Quality and Climate Change 2010 campaign. The model correctly simulates broad spatial patterns of NH^(+)_(4) and NO^(-)_(3) including the elevated concentrations in eastern SoCAB. However, areas for model improvement have been identified. NH_3 emissions from livestock and dairy facilities appear to be too low, while those related to waste disposal in western SoCAB may be too high. Analyses using measurements from flights over SoCAB suggest that problems with NH3 predictions can influence NO^(-)_(3) predictions there. Offline ISORROPIA II calculations suggest that overpredictions of NH_x in Pasadena cause excessive partitioning of total nitrate to the particle phase overnight, while underpredictions of Na^+ cause too much partitioning to the gas phase during the day. Also, the model seems to underestimate mixing during the evening boundary layer transition leading to excessive nitrate formation on some nights. Overall, the analyses demonstrate fine-scale variations in model performance within and across the air basins. Improvements in inventories and spatial allocations of NH_3 emissions and in parameterizations of sea spray emissions, evening mixing processes, and heterogeneous ClNO_2 chemistry could improve model performance.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2013

Gas phase oxidation of monoethanolamine (MEA) with OH radical and ozone: kinetics, products, and particles.

Nadine Borduas; Jonathan P. D. Abbatt; Jennifer G. Murphy

Monoethanolamine (MEA) is currently the benchmark solvent in carbon capture and storage (CCS), a technology aimed at reducing CO2 emissions in large combustion industries. To accurately assess the environmental impact of CCS, a sound understanding of the fate of MEA in the atmosphere is necessary. Relative and absolute rate kinetic experiments were conducted in a smog chamber using online proton transfer reaction mass spectrometry (PTR-MS) to follow the decay of MEA. The room temperature (295 ± 3K) kinetics of oxidation with hydroxyl radicals from light and dark sources yield an average value of (7.02 ± 0.46) × 10(-11) cm(3) molec(-1) s(-1), in good agreement with previously published data. For the first time, the rate coefficient for MEA with ozone was measured: (1.09 ± 0.05) × 10(-18) cm(3) molec(-1) s(-1). An investigation into the oxidation products was also conducted using online chemical ionization mass spectrometry (CI-TOFMS) where formamide, isocyanic acid as well as higher order products including cyclic amines were detected. Significant particle numbers and mass loadings were observed during the MEA oxidation experiments and accounted for over 15% of the fate of MEA-derived nitrogen.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Evidence for a nitrous acid (HONO) reservoir at the ground surface in Bakersfield, CA, during CalNex 2010

Trevor C. VandenBoer; Milos Z. Markovic; J. E. Sanders; Xinrong Ren; S. E. Pusede; E. C. Browne; R. C. Cohen; L. Zhang; J. Thomas; William H. Brune; Jennifer G. Murphy

Measurements of HONO(g) and particulate nitrite (NO2−(p)) were made with a modified Ambient Ion Monitor–Ion Chromatography (AIM-IC) instrument during California at the Nexus of Air Quality and Climate 2010 in Bakersfield, CA (CalNex-San Joaquin Valley (SJV)). Observations of gas and particulate matter (PM2.5) water-soluble composition showed accumulation of both species at night, followed by loss the next day. Intercomparison with a Stripping Coil-UV/Vis Absorption Photometer (SC-AP) demonstrated excellent agreement with the AIM-IC HONO(g) measurement (slope = 0.957, R2 = 0.86), and the particulate nitrite observations were validated to be free of known interferences for wet chemical instrumentation. The accumulation of nitrite into particulate matter was found to be enhanced when gaseous mixing ratios of HONO(g) were highest. Reactive uptake of HONO(g) on to lofted dust and the ground surface, forming a reservoir, is a potential mechanism to explain these observations. The AIM-IC HONO(g) measurements were parameterized in a chemical model to calculate the ground surface daytime HONO(g) source strength at 4.5 m above the surface, found to be on the order of 1.27 ppb h−1, to determine the relative importance of a surface reservoir. If all deposited nighttime HONO(g) is reemitted the following day, up to 30% of the daytime HONO(g) source at CalNex-SJV may be accounted for. The observations of HONO(g) and NO2−(p) in Bakersfield, during CalNex, suggest a surface sink and source of HONO(g). Extension of currently accepted unknown daytime HONO(g) source reactions to include a potential surface HONO(g) reservoir should therefore be sound, but quantitation of the relative contributions of each surface source toward daytime HONO(g) production remains to be resolved.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2013

Insights into Secondary Organic Aerosol Formation Mechanisms from Measured Gas/Particle Partitioning of Specific Organic Tracer Compounds

Yunliang Zhao; Nathan M. Kreisberg; David R. Worton; Gabriel Isaacman; R. J. Weber; Shang Liu; Douglas A. Day; Lynn M. Russell; Milos Z. Markovic; Trevor C. VandenBoer; Jennifer G. Murphy; Susanne V. Hering; Allen H. Goldstein

In situ measurements of organic compounds in both gas and particle phases were made with a thermal desorption aerosol gas chromatography (TAG) instrument. The gas/particle partitioning of phthalic acid, pinonaldehyde, and 6,10,14-trimethyl-2-pentadecanone is discussed in detail to explore secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation mechanisms. Measured fractions in the particle phase (f(part)) of 6,10,14-trimethyl-2-pentadecanone were similar to those expected from the absorptive gas/particle partitioning theory, suggesting that its partitioning is dominated by absorption processes. However, f(part) of phthalic acid and pinonaldehyde were substantially higher than predicted. The formation of low-volatility products from reactions of phthalic acid with ammonia is proposed as one possible mechanism to explain the high f(part) of phthalic acid. The observations of particle-phase pinonaldehyde when inorganic acids were fully neutralized indicate that inorganic acids are not required for the occurrence of reactive uptake of pinonaldehyde on particles. The observed relationship between f(part) of pinonaldehyde and relative humidity suggests that the aerosol water plays a significant role in the formation of particle-phase pinonaldehyde. Our results clearly show it is necessary to include multiple gas/particle partitioning pathways in models to predict SOA and multiple SOA tracers in source apportionment models to reconstruct SOA.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Influence of Oil and Gas Emissions on Summertime Ozone in the Colorado Northern Front Range

Erin E. McDuffie; P. M. Edwards; J. B. Gilman; William P. Dubé; M. Trainer; Daniel E. Wolfe; Wayne M. Angevine; J. A. Degouw; Eric J. Williams; Alex G. Tevlin; Jennifer G. Murphy; Emily V. Fischer; S. A. McKeen; Thomas B. Ryerson; J. Peischl; John S. Holloway; K. C. Aikin; A. O. Langford; Christoph J. Senff; Raul J. Alvarez; Samuel R. Hall; Kirk Ullmann; Kathy O. Lantz; Steven S. Brown

Tropospheric O3 has been decreasing across much of the eastern U.S. but has remained steady or even increased in some western regions. Recent increases in VOC and NOx emissions associated with the production of oil and natural gas (O&NG) may contribute to this trend in some areas. The Northern Front Range of Colorado has regularly exceeded O3 air quality standards during summertime in recent years. This region has VOC emissions from a rapidly developing O&NG basin and low concentrations of biogenic VOC in close proximity to urban-Denver NOx emissions. Here VOC OH reactivity (OHR), O3 production efficiency (OPE), and an observationally constrained box model are used to quantify the influence of O&NG emissions on regional summertime O3 production. Analyses are based on measurements acquired over two summers at a central location within the Northern Front Range that lies between major regional O&NG and urban emission sectors. Observational analyses suggest that mixing obscures any OPE differences in air primarily influenced by O&NG or urban emission sector. The box model confirms relatively modest OPE differences that are within the uncertainties of the field observations. Box model results also indicate that maximum O3 at the measurement location is sensitive to changes in NOx mixing ratio but also responsive to O&NG VOC reductions. Combined, these analyses show that O&NG alkanes contribute over 80% to the observed carbon mixing ratio, roughly 50% to the regional VOC OHR, and approximately 20% to regional photochemical O3 production.


Nature Communications | 2016

Contribution of Arctic seabird-colony ammonia to atmospheric particles and cloud-albedo radiative effect

B. Croft; Gregory R. Wentworth; Randall V. Martin; W. R. Leaitch; Jennifer G. Murphy; Benjamin N. Murphy; John K. Kodros; J. P. D. Abbatt; Jeffrey R. Pierce

The Arctic region is vulnerable to climate change and able to affect global climate. The summertime Arctic atmosphere is pristine and strongly influenced by natural regional emissions, which have poorly understood climate impacts related to atmospheric particles and clouds. Here we show that ammonia from seabird-colony guano is a key factor contributing to bursts of newly formed particles, which are observed every summer in the near-surface atmosphere at Alert, Nunavut, Canada. Our chemical-transport model simulations indicate that the pan-Arctic seabird-influenced particles can grow by sulfuric acid and organic vapour condensation to diameters sufficiently large to promote pan-Arctic cloud-droplet formation in the clean Arctic summertime. We calculate that the resultant cooling tendencies could be large (about −0.5 W m−2 pan-Arctic-mean cooling), exceeding −1 W m−2 near the largest seabird colonies due to the effects of seabird-influenced particles on cloud albedo. These coupled ecological–chemical processes may be susceptible to Arctic warming and industrialization.

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R. C. Cohen

University of California

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C. E. Reeves

University of East Anglia

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D. E. Oram

University of East Anglia

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Douglas A. Day

University of Colorado Boulder

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