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Dive into the research topics where P. J. Wooldridge is active.

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Featured researches published by P. J. Wooldridge.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Surface and Lightning Sources of Nitrogen Oxides over the United States: Magnitudes, Chemical Evolution, and Outflow

Rynda C. Hudman; Daniel J. Jacob; Solène Turquety; Eric M. Leibensperger; Lee T. Murray; Shiliang Wu; Alice B. Gilliland; M. Avery; Timothy H. Bertram; William H. Brune; R. C. Cohen; Jack E. Dibb; F. Flocke; Alan Fried; John S. Holloway; J. A. Neuman; Richard E. Orville; A. E. Perring; Xinrong Ren; G. W. Sachse; Hanwant B. Singh; Aaron L. Swanson; P. J. Wooldridge

[1] We use observations from two aircraft during the ICARTT campaign over the eastern United States and North Atlantic during summer 2004, interpreted with a global 3-D model of tropospheric chemistry (GEOS-Chem) to test current understanding of regional sources, chemical evolution, and export of NOx. The boundary layer NOx data provide top-down verification of a 50% decrease in power plant and industry NOx emissions over the eastern United States between 1999 and 2004. Observed NOx concentrations at 8–12 km altitude were 0.55 ± 0.36 ppbv, much larger than in previous U.S. aircraft campaigns (ELCHEM, SUCCESS, SONEX) though consistent with data from the NOXAR program aboard commercial aircraft. We show that regional lightning is the dominant source of this upper tropospheric NOx and increases upper tropospheric ozone by 10 ppbv. Simulating ICARTT upper tropospheric NOx observations with GEOS-Chem requires a factor of 4 increase in modeled NOx yield per flash (to 500 mol/ flash). Observed OH concentrations were a factor of 2 lower than can be explained from current photochemical models, for reasons that are unclear. A NOy-CO correlation analysis of the fraction f of North American NOx emissions vented to the free troposphere as NOy (sum of NOx and its oxidation products) shows observed f = 16 ± 10% and modeled f = 14 ± 9%, consistent with previous studies. Export to the lower free troposphere is mostly HNO3 but at higher altitudes is mostly PAN. The model successfully simulates NOy export efficiency and speciation, supporting previous model estimates of a large U.S. anthropogenic contribution to global tropospheric ozone through PAN export.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Observational constraints on the chemistry of isoprene nitrates over the eastern United States

Larry W. Horowitz; Arlene M. Fiore; George P. Milly; R. C. Cohen; Anne E. Perring; P. J. Wooldridge; Peter G. Hess; Louisa Kent Emmons; Jean-Francois Lamarque

incompatible with the observations. We find that � 50% of the isoprene nitrate production in the model occurs via reactions of isoprene (or its oxidation products) with the NO3 radical, but note that the isoprene nitrate yield from this pathway is highly uncertain. Using recent estimates of rapid reaction rates with ozone, 20–24% of isoprene nitrates are lost via this pathway, implying that ozonolysis is an important loss process for isoprene nitrates. Isoprene nitrates are shown to have a major impact on the nitrogen oxide (NOx =N O +N O2) budget in the summertime U.S. continental boundary layer, consuming 15–19% of the emitted NOx, of which 4–6% is recycled back to NOx and the remainder is exported as isoprene nitrates (2–3%) or deposited (8–10%). Our constraints on reaction rates, branching ratios, and deposition rates need to be confirmed through further laboratory and field measurements. The model systematically underestimates free tropospheric concentrations of organic nitrates, indicating a need for future investigation of the processes controlling the observed distribution.


Science | 2012

Evidence for NOx Control over Nighttime SOA Formation

A. W. Rollins; E. C. Browne; K.-E. Min; S. E. Pusede; P. J. Wooldridge; D. R. Gentner; Allen H. Goldstein; Shang Liu; Douglas A. Day; Lynn M. Russell; R. C. Cohen

Nighttime Sources Organic aerosols account for about half of the total mass of small (submicrometer) particles in the troposphere, and most of them are believed to form through the oxidation of volatile molecules, rather than being emitted directly from specific sources. These particles have important roles in many atmospheric processes, and therefore a better understanding of their complex composition and chemistry is desirable. Rollins et al. (p. 1210) report on measurements of particulate organic nitrates, an important class of organic aerosols that form at night. However, they also found that high concentrations of organic molecules can suppress the growth of organic nitrate particles. These observations should help improve efforts to reduce organic aerosol pollution. The growth of particulate organic nitrates can account for much of the nighttime increase in organic aerosol mass. Laboratory studies have established a number of chemical pathways by which nitrogen oxides (NOx) affect atmospheric organic aerosol (OA) production. However, these effects have not been directly observed in ambient OA. We report measurements of particulate organic nitrates in Bakersfield, California, the nighttime formation of which increases with NOx and is suppressed by high concentrations of organic molecules that rapidly react with nitrate radical (NO3)—evidence that multigenerational chemistry is responsible for organic nitrate aerosol production. This class of molecules represents about a third of the nighttime increase in OA, suggesting that most nighttime secondary OA is due to the NO3 product of anthropogenic NOx emissions. Consequently, reductions in NOx emissions should reduce the concentration of organic aerosol in Bakersfield and the surrounding region.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2015

The Deep Convective Clouds and Chemistry (DC3) Field Campaign

M. C. Barth; C. A. Cantrell; William H. Brune; Steven A. Rutledge; J. H. Crawford; Heidi Huntrieser; Lawrence D. Carey; Donald R. MacGorman; Morris L. Weisman; Kenneth E. Pickering; Eric C. Bruning; Bruce E. Anderson; Eric C. Apel; Michael I. Biggerstaff; Teresa L. Campos; Pedro Campuzano-Jost; R. C. Cohen; John D. Crounse; Douglas A. Day; Glenn S. Diskin; F. Flocke; Alan Fried; C. Garland; Brian G. Heikes; Shawn B. Honomichl; Rebecca S. Hornbrook; L. Gregory Huey; Jose L. Jimenez; Timothy J. Lang; Michael Lichtenstern

AbstractThe Deep Convective Clouds and Chemistry (DC3) field experiment produced an exceptional dataset on thunderstorms, including their dynamical, physical, and electrical structures and their impact on the chemical composition of the troposphere. The field experiment gathered detailed information on the chemical composition of the inflow and outflow regions of midlatitude thunderstorms in northeast Colorado, west Texas to central Oklahoma, and northern Alabama. A unique aspect of the DC3 strategy was to locate and sample the convective outflow a day after active convection in order to measure the chemical transformations within the upper-tropospheric convective plume. These data are being analyzed to investigate transport and dynamics of the storms, scavenging of soluble trace gases and aerosols, production of nitrogen oxides by lightning, relationships between lightning flash rates and storm parameters, chemistry in the upper troposphere that is affected by the convection, and related source character...


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Biomass burning dominates brown carbon absorption in the rural southeastern United States: Biomass burning dominates brown carbon

Rebecca A. Washenfelder; A. R. Attwood; C. A. Brock; Hongyu Guo; Lu Xu; Rodney J. Weber; Nga L. Ng; Hannah M. Allen; Benjamin Ayres; Karsten Baumann; R. C. Cohen; Danielle C. Draper; Kaitlin C. Duffey; Eric S. Edgerton; Juliane L. Fry; Weiwei Hu; J. L. Jimenez; Brett B. Palm; Paul S. Romer; Elizabeth A. Stone; P. J. Wooldridge; Steven S. Brown

Brown carbon aerosol consists of light-absorbing organic particulate matter with wavelength-dependent absorption. Aerosol optical extinction, absorption, size distributions, and chemical composition were measured in rural Alabama during summer 2013. The field site was well located to examine sources of brown carbon aerosol, with influence by high biogenic organic aerosol concentrations, pollution from two nearby cities, and biomass burning aerosol. We report the optical closure between measured dry aerosol extinction at 365 nm and calculated extinction from composition and size distribution, showing agreement within experiment uncertainties. We find that aerosol optical extinction is dominated by scattering, with single-scattering albedo values of 0.94 ± 0.02. Black carbon aerosol accounts for 91 ± 9% of the total carbonaceous aerosol absorption at 365 nm, while organic aerosol accounts for 9 ± 9%. The majority of brown carbon aerosol mass is associated with biomass burning, with smaller contributions from biogenically derived secondary organic aerosol.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016

Organic nitrate chemistry and its implications for nitrogen budgets in an isoprene- and monoterpene-rich atmosphere: constraints from aircraft (SEAC 4 RS) and ground-based (SOAS) observations in the Southeast US

Jenny A. Fisher; Daniel J. Jacob; Katherine R. Travis; Patrick S. Kim; Eloise A. Marais; Christopher Miller; Karen Yu; Lei Zhu; Robert M. Yantosca; Melissa P. Sulprizio; Jingqiu Mao; Paul O. Wennberg; John D. Crounse; Alex P. Teng; Tran B. Nguyen; Jason M. St. Clair; R. C. Cohen; Paul M. Romer; Benjamin A. Nault; P. J. Wooldridge; Jose L. Jimenez; Pedro Campuzano-Jost; Douglas A. Day; Weiwei Hu; Paul B. Shepson; Fulizi Xiong; D. R. Blake; Allen H. Goldstein; Pawel K. Misztal; T. F. Hanisco

Formation of organic nitrates (RONO2) during oxidation of biogenic volatile organic compounds (BVOCs: isoprene, monoterpenes) is a significant loss pathway for atmospheric nitrogen oxide radicals (NOx), but the chemistry of RONO2 formation and degradation remains uncertain. Here we implement a new BVOC oxidation mechanism (including updated isoprene chemistry, new monoterpene chemistry, and particle uptake of RONO2) in the GEOS-Chem global chemical transport model with ∼25 × 25 km2 resolution over North America. We evaluate the model using aircraft (SEAC4RS) and ground-based (SOAS) observations of NOx, BVOCs, and RONO2 from the Southeast US in summer 2013. The updated simulation successfully reproduces the concentrations of individual gas- and particle-phase RONO2 species measured during the campaigns. Gas-phase isoprene nitrates account for 25-50% of observed RONO2 in surface air, and we find that another 10% is contributed by gas-phase monoterpene nitrates. Observations in the free troposphere show an important contribution from long-lived nitrates derived from anthropogenic VOCs. During both campaigns, at least 10% of observed boundary layer RONO2 were in the particle phase. We find that aerosol uptake followed by hydrolysis to HNO3 accounts for 60% of simulated gas-phase RONO2 loss in the boundary layer. Other losses are 20% by photolysis to recycle NOx and 15% by dry deposition. RONO2 production accounts for 20% of the net regional NOx sink in the Southeast US in summer, limited by the spatial segregation between BVOC and NOx emissions. This segregation implies that RONO2 production will remain a minor sink for NOx in the Southeast US in the future even as NOx emissions continue to decline.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1995

Phase equilibria of H2SO4, HNO3, and HCl hydrates and the composition of polar stratospheric clouds

P. J. Wooldridge; Renyi Zhang; Mario J. Molina

Thermodynamic properties and phase equilibria behavior for the hydrates and coexisting pairs of hydrates of common acids which exist in the stratosphere are assembled from new laboratory measurements and standard literature data. The analysis focuses upon solid-vapor and solid-solid-vapor equilibria at temperatures around 200 K and includes new calorimetric and vapor pressure data. Calculated partial pressures versus 1/T slopes for the hydrates and coexisting hydrates agree well with experimental data where available.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2013

Observations of total RONO 2 over the boreal forest: NO x sinks and HNO 3 sources

E. C. Browne; K.-E. Min; P. J. Wooldridge; Eric C. Apel; D. R. Blake; William H. Brune; Chris Cantrell; Michael J. Cubison; Glenn S. Diskin; Jose L. Jimenez; Andrew J. Weinheimer; Paul O. Wennberg; Armin Wisthaler; R. C. Cohen

In contrast with the textbook view of remote chemistry where HNO_3 formation is the primary sink of nitrogen oxides, recent theoretical analyses show that formation of RONO_2 (ΣANs) from isoprene and other terpene precursors is the primary net chemical loss of nitrogen oxides over the remote continents where the concentration of nitrogen oxides is low. This then increases the prominence of questions concerning the chemical lifetime and ultimate fate of ΣANs. We present observations of nitrogen oxides and organic molecules collected over the Canadian boreal forest during the summer which show that ΣANs account for ~20% of total oxidized nitrogen and that their instantaneous production rate is larger than that of HNO3. This confirms the primary role of reactions producing ΣANs as a control over the lifetime of NO_x (NO_x = NO + NO_2) in remote, continental environments. However, HNO_3 is generally present in larger concentrations than ΣANs indicating that the atmospheric lifetime of ΣANs is shorter than the HNO_3 lifetime. We investigate a range of proposed loss mechanisms that would explain the inferred lifetime of ΣANs finding that in combination with deposition, two processes are consistent with the observations: (1) rapid ozonolysis of isoprene nitrates where at least ~40% of the ozonolysis products release NO_x from the carbon backbone and/or (2) hydrolysis of particulate organic nitrates with HNO_3 as a product. Implications of these ideas for our understanding of NO_x and NO_y budget in remote and rural locations are discussed.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2015

An Atmospheric Constraint on the NO2 Dependence of Daytime Near-Surface Nitrous Acid (HONO)

S. E. Pusede; Trevor C. VandenBoer; Jennifer G. Murphy; Milos Z. Markovic; Cora J. Young; P. R. Veres; James M. Roberts; Rebecca A. Washenfelder; Steven S. Brown; Xinrong Ren; Catalina Tsai; J. Stutz; William H. Brune; E. C. Browne; P. J. Wooldridge; Ashley R. Graham; R. J. Weber; Allen H. Goldstein; S. Dusanter; Stephen M. Griffith; Philip S. Stevens; Barry Lefer; R. C. Cohen

Recent observations suggest a large and unknown daytime source of nitrous acid (HONO) to the atmosphere. Multiple mechanisms have been proposed, many of which involve chemistry that reduces nitrogen dioxide (NO2) on some time scale. To examine the NO2 dependence of the daytime HONO source, we compare weekday and weekend measurements of NO2 and HONO in two U.S. cities. We find that daytime HONO does not increase proportionally to increases in same-day NO2, i.e., the local NO2 concentration at that time and several hours earlier. We discuss various published HONO formation pathways in the context of this constraint.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2016

Observational constraints on the oxidation of NOx in the upper troposphere

Benjamin A. Nault; C. Garland; P. J. Wooldridge; William H. Brune; Pedro Campuzano-Jost; John D. Crounse; Douglas A. Day; Jack E. Dibb; Samuel R. Hall; L. Gregory Huey; Jose L. Jimenez; Xiaoxi Liu; Jingqiu Mao; Tomas Mikoviny; J. Peischl; Ilana B. Pollack; Xinrong Ren; Thomas B. Ryerson; Eric Scheuer; Kirk Ullmann; Paul O. Wennberg; Armin Wisthaler; Li Zhang; R. C. Cohen

NOx (NOx ≡ NO + NO2) regulates O3 and HOx (HOx ≡ OH + HO2) concentrations in the upper troposphere. In the laboratory, it is difficult to measure rates and branching ratios of the chemical reactions affecting NOx at the low temperatures and pressures characteristic of the upper troposphere, making direct measurements in the atmosphere especially useful. We report quasi-Lagrangian observations of the chemical evolution of an air parcel following a lightning event that results in high NOx concentrations. These quasi-Lagrangian measurements obtained during the Deep Convective Clouds and Chemistry experiment are used to characterize the daytime rates for conversion of NOx to different peroxy nitrates, the sum of alkyl and multifunctional nitrates, and HNO3. We infer the following production rate constants [in (cm(3)/molecule)/s] at 225 K and 230 hPa: 7.2(±5.7) × 10(-12) (CH3O2NO2), 5.1(±3.1) × 10(-13) (HO2NO2), 1.3(±0.8) × 10(-11) (PAN), 7.3(±3.4) × 10(-12) (PPN), and 6.2(±2.9) × 10(-12) (HNO3). The HNO3 and HO2NO2 rates are ∼ 30-50% lower than currently recommended whereas the other rates are consistent with current recommendations to within ±30%. The analysis indicates that HNO3 production from the HO2 and NO reaction (if any) must be accompanied by a slower rate for the reaction of OH with NO2, keeping the total combined rate for the two processes at the rate reported for HNO3 production above.

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R. C. Cohen

University of California

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Timothy H. Bertram

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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William H. Brune

Pennsylvania State University

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Douglas A. Day

University of Colorado Boulder

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E. C. Browne

University of California

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A. E. Perring

Earth System Research Laboratory

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Jack E. Dibb

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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