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Dive into the research topics where S. E. Pusede is active.

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Featured researches published by S. E. Pusede.


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.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2013

Observational insights into aerosol formation from isoprene.

David R. Worton; Jason D. Surratt; Brian W. Lafranchi; A. W. H. Chan; Yunliang Zhao; R. J. Weber; Jeong Hoo Park; J. B. Gilman; Joost A. de Gouw; Changhyoun Park; Gunnar W. Schade; Melinda R. Beaver; Jason M. St. Clair; John D. Crounse; Paul O. Wennberg; Glenn M. Wolfe; Sara Harrold; Joel A. Thornton; Delphine K. Farmer; Kenneth S. Docherty; Michael J. Cubison; Jose L. Jimenez; Amanda A. Frossard; Lynn M. Russell; Kasper Kristensen; Marianne Glasius; Jingqiu Mao; Xinrong Ren; William H. Brune; E. C. Browne

Atmospheric photooxidation of isoprene is an important source of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) and there is increasing evidence that anthropogenic oxidant emissions can enhance this SOA formation. In this work, we use ambient observations of organosulfates formed from isoprene epoxydiols (IEPOX) and methacrylic acid epoxide (MAE) and a broad suite of chemical measurements to investigate the relative importance of nitrogen oxide (NO/NO2) and hydroperoxyl (HO2) SOA formation pathways from isoprene at a forested site in California. In contrast to IEPOX, the calculated production rate of MAE was observed to be independent of temperature. This is the result of the very fast thermolysis of MPAN at high temperatures that affects the distribution of the MPAN reservoir (MPAN / MPA radical) reducing the fraction that can react with OH to form MAE and subsequently SOA (F(MAE formation)). The strong temperature dependence of F(MAE formation) helps to explain our observations of similar concentrations of IEPOX-derived organosulfates (IEPOX-OS; ~1 ng m(-3)) and MAE-derived organosulfates (MAE-OS; ~1 ng m(-3)) under cooler conditions (lower isoprene concentrations) and much higher IEPOX-OS (~20 ng m(-3)) relative to MAE-OS (<0.0005 ng m(-3)) at higher temperatures (higher isoprene concentrations). A kinetic model of IEPOX and MAE loss showed that MAE forms 10-100 times more ring-opening products than IEPOX and that both are strongly dependent on aerosol water content when aerosol pH is constant. However, the higher fraction of MAE ring opening products does not compensate for the lower MAE production under warmer conditions (higher isoprene concentrations) resulting in lower formation of MAE-derived products relative to IEPOX at the surface. In regions of high NOx, high isoprene emissions and strong vertical mixing the slower MPAN thermolysis rate aloft could increase the fraction of MPAN that forms MAE resulting in a vertically varying isoprene SOA source.


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.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Frequency and impact of summertime stratospheric intrusions over Maryland during DISCOVER‐AQ (2011): New evidence from NASA's GEOS‐5 simulations

Lesley E. Ott; Bryan N. Duncan; Anne M. Thompson; Glenn S. Diskin; Zachary Fasnacht; A. O. Langford; Meiyun Lin; Andrea Molod; J. Eric Nielsen; S. E. Pusede; Krzysztof Wargan; Andrew J. Weinheimer; Yasuko Yoshida

Aircraft observations and ozonesonde profiles collected on July 14 and 27, 2011, during the Maryland month-long DISCOVER-AQ campaign, indicate the presence of stratospheric air just above the planetary boundary layer (PBL). This raises the question of whether summer stratospheric intrusions (SIs) elevate surface ozone levels and to what degree they influence background ozone levels and contribute to ozone production. We used idealized stratospheric air tracers, along with observations, to determine the frequency and extent of SIs in Maryland during July 2011. On 4 of 14 flight days, SIs were detected in layers that the aircraft encountered above the PBL from the coincidence of enhanced ozone, moderate CO, and low moisture. Satellite observations of lower tropospheric humidity confirmed the occurrence of synoptic scale influence of SIs as do simulations with the GEOS-5 Atmospheric General Circulation Model. The evolution of GEOS-5 stratospheric air tracers agree with the timing and location of observed stratospheric influence and indicate that more than 50% of air in SI layers above the PBL had resided in the stratosphere within the previous 14 days. Despite having a strong influence in the lower free troposphere, these events did not significantly affect surface ozone, which remained low on intrusion days. The model indicates similar frequencies of stratospheric influence during all summers from 2009-2013. GEOS-5 results suggest that, over Maryland, the strong inversion capping the summer PBL limits downward mixing of stratospheric air during much of the day, helping to preserve low surface ozone associated with frontal passages that precede SIs.


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 Geophysical Research | 2018

Modeling Regional Pollution Transport Events During KORUS‐AQ: Progress and Challenges in Improving Representation of Land‐Atmosphere Feedbacks

Min Huang; J. H. Crawford; Glenn S. Diskin; Joseph A. Santanello; Sujay V. Kumar; S. E. Pusede; Mark Parrington; Gregory R. Carmichael

This study evaluates the impact of assimilating soil moisture data from NASAs Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) on short-term regional weather and air quality modeling in East Asia during the Korea-US Air Quality Study (KORUS-AQ) airborne campaign. SMAP data are assimilated into the Noah land surface model using an ensemble Kalman filter approach in the Land Information System framework, which is semi-coupled with the NASA-Unified Weather Research and Forecasting model with online chemistry (NUWRF-Chem). With SMAP assimilation included, water vapor and carbon monoxide (CO) transport from northern-central China transitional climate zones to South Korea is better represented in NUWRF-Chem during two studied pollution events. Influenced by different synoptic conditions and emission patterns, impact of SMAP assimilation on modeled CO in South Korea is intense (>30 ppbv) during one event and less significant (<8 ppbv) during the other. SMAP assimilation impact on air quality modeling skill is complicated by other error sources such as the chemical initial and boundary conditions (IC/LBC) and emission inputs of NUWRF-Chem. Using a satellite-observation-constrained chemical IC/LBC instead of a free-running, coarser-resolution chemical IC/LBC reduces modeled CO by up to 80 ppbv over South Korea. Consequently, CO performance is improved in the middle-upper troposphere whereas degraded in the lower troposphere. Remaining negative CO biases result largely from the emissions inputs. The advancements in land surface modeling and chemical IC/LBC presented here are expected to benefit future investigations on constraining emissions using observations, which can in turn enable more accurate assessments of SMAP assimilation and chemical IC/LBC impacts.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018

Modeling NH4NO3 Over the San Joaquin Valley During the 2013 DISCOVER‐AQ Campaign

James T. Kelly; Caroline L. Parworth; Qi Zhang; David J. Miller; Kang Sun; Mark A. Zondlo; Kirk R. Baker; Armin Wisthaler; J. B. Nowak; S. E. Pusede; R. C. Cohen; Andrew J. Weinheimer; Andreas J. Beyersdorf; Gail Tonnesen; Jesse O. Bash; L. C. Valin; J. H. Crawford; Alan Fried; James G. Walega

The San Joaquin Valley (SJV) of California experiences high concentrations of particulate matter NH4NO3 during episodes of meteorological stagnation in winter. A rich data set of observations related to NH4NO3 formation was acquired during multiple periods of elevated NH4NO3 during the Deriving Information on Surface Conditions from Column and Vertically Resolved Observations Relevant to Air Quality (DISCOVER-AQ) field campaign in SJV in January and February 2013. Here NH4NO3 is simulated during the SJV DISCOVER-AQ study period with the Community Multiscale Air Quality (CMAQ) model, diagnostic model evaluation is performed using the DISCOVER-AQ data set, and integrated reaction rate analysis is used to quantify HNO3 production rates. Simulated NO3- generally agrees well with routine monitoring of 24-hr average NO3-, but comparisons with hourly average NO3- measurements in Fresno revealed differences at higher time resolution. Predictions of gas-particle partitioning of total nitrate (HNO3 + NO3-) and NHx (NH3 + NH4+) generally agree well with measurements in Fresno, although partitioning of total nitrate to HNO3 is sometimes overestimated at low relative humidity in afternoon. Gas-particle partitioning results indicate that NH4NO3 formation is limited by HNO3 availability in both the model and ambient. NH3 mixing ratios are underestimated, particularly in areas with large agricultural activity, and additional work on the spatial allocation of NH3 emissions is warranted. During a period of elevated NH4NO3, the model predicted that the OH + NO2 pathway contributed 46% to total HNO3production in SJV and the N2O5 heterogeneous hydrolysis pathway contributed 54%. The relative importance of the OH + NO2 pathway for HNO3 production is predicted to increase as NOx emissions decrease.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2017

On the effect of upwind emission controls on ozone in Sequoia National Park

Claire E. Buysse; Jessica A. Munyan; Clara A. Bailey; Alexander Kotsakis; Jessica A. Sagona; Annie Esperanza; S. E. Pusede

Overall, the paper is well written and is an easy read, but there are some fundamental issues that must be addressed before this paper can be published. In general, there are numerous, rather bold statements, that need to be substantiated. Most things are overstated in the manuscript, and the rudimentary analysis done in Section 3.4, past and future exceedances, is completely unacceptable for any paper that is going to be published in ACP, or any other scientific journal. As far as overstating goes, the first sentence of the abstract is simply not correct:


Chemical Reviews | 2013

An Observational Perspective on the Atmospheric Impacts of Alkyl and Multifunctional Nitrates on Ozone and Secondary Organic Aerosol

A. E. Perring; S. E. Pusede; R. C. Cohen


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2012

On the observed response of ozone to NO x and VOC reactivity reductions in San Joaquin Valley California 1995–present

S. E. Pusede; R. C. Cohen

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R. C. Cohen

University of California

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E. C. Browne

University of California

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William H. Brune

Pennsylvania State University

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Andrew J. Weinheimer

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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K.-E. Min

University of California

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