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Featured researches published by Samuel R. Hall.


web science | 2003

International Photolysis Frequency Measurement and Model Intercomparison (IPMMI): Spectral actinic solar flux measurements and modeling

A. F. Bais; Sasha Madronich; J. H. Crawford; Samuel R. Hall; Bernhard Mayer; M. van Weele; Jacqueline Lenoble; Jack G. Calvert; C. A. Cantrell; Richard E. Shetter; Andreas Hofzumahaus; Peter Koepke; Paul S. Monks; G. J. Frost; Richard McKenzie; N. Krotkov; Arve Kylling; William H. Swartz; Steven A. Lloyd; G. G. Pfister; T. J. Martin; E.‐P. Roeth; Erik Griffioen; Ansgar Ruggaber; Maarten C. Krol; Alexander Kraus; Gavin D. Edwards; M. Mueller; Barry Lefer; P. V. Johnston

[1] The International Photolysis Frequency Measurement and Model Intercomparison (IPMMI) took place in Boulder, Colorado, from 15 to 19 June 1998, aiming to investigate the level of accuracy of photolysis frequency and spectral downwelling actinic flux measurements and to explore the ability of radiative transfer models to reproduce the measurements. During this period, 2 days were selected to compare model calculations with measurements, one cloud-free and one cloudy. A series of ancillary measurements were also performed and provided parameters required as input to the models. Both measurements and modeling were blind, in the sense that no exchanges of data or calculations were allowed among the participants, and the results were objectively analyzed and compared by two independent referees. The objective of this paper is, first, to present the results of comparisons made between measured and modeled downwelling actinic flux and irradiance spectra and, second, to investigate the reasons for which some of the models or measurements deviate from the others. For clear skies the relative agreement between the 16 models depends strongly on solar zenith angle (SZA) and wavelength as well as on the input parameters used, like the extraterrestrial (ET) solar flux and the absorption cross sections. The majority of the models (11) agreed to within about +/-6% for solar zenith angles smaller than similar to60degrees. The agreement among the measured spectra depends on the optical characteristics of the instruments (e.g., slit function, stray light rejection, and sensitivity). After transforming the measurements to a common spectral resolution, two of the three participating spectroradiometers agree to within similar to10% for wavelengths longer than 310 nm and at all solar zenith angles, while their differences increase when moving to shorter wavelengths. Most models agree well with the measurements (both downwelling actinic flux and global irradiance), especially at local noon, where the agreement is within a few percent. A few models exhibit significant deviations with respect either to wavelength or to solar zenith angle. Models that use the Atmospheric Laboratory for Applications and Science 3 (ATLAS-3) solar flux agree better with the measured spectra, suggesting that ATLAS-3 is probably more appropriate for radiative transfer modeling in the ultraviolet.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016

Why do models overestimate surface ozone in the Southeast United States

Katherine R. Travis; Daniel J. Jacob; Jenny A. Fisher; Patrick S. Kim; Eloise A. Marais; Lei Zhu; Karen Yu; Christopher Miller; Robert M. Yantosca; Melissa P. Sulprizio; Anne M. Thompson; Paul O. Wennberg; John D. Crounse; Jason M. St. Clair; R. C. Cohen; Joshua L. Laughner; Jack E. Dibb; Samuel R. Hall; Kirk Ullmann; G. M. Wolfe; I. B. Pollack; J. Peischl; J. A. Neuman; X. Zhou

Ozone pollution in the Southeast US involves complex chemistry driven by emissions of anthropogenic nitrogen oxide radicals (NOx ≡ NO + NO2) and biogenic isoprene. Model estimates of surface ozone concentrations tend to be biased high in the region and this is of concern for designing effective emission control strategies to meet air quality standards. We use detailed chemical observations from the SEAC4RS aircraft campaign in August and September 2013, interpreted with the GEOS-Chem chemical transport model at 0.25°×0.3125° horizontal resolution, to better understand the factors controlling surface ozone in the Southeast US. We find that the National Emission Inventory (NEI) for NOx from the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is too high. This finding is based on SEAC4RS observations of NOx and its oxidation products, surface network observations of nitrate wet deposition fluxes, and OMI satellite observations of tropospheric NO2 columns. Our results indicate that NEI NOx emissions from mobile and industrial sources must be reduced by 30-60%, dependent on the assumption of the contribution by soil NOx emissions. Upper tropospheric NO2 from lightning makes a large contribution to satellite observations of tropospheric NO2 that must be accounted for when using these data to estimate surface NOx emissions. We find that only half of isoprene oxidation proceeds by the high-NOx pathway to produce ozone; this fraction is only moderately sensitive to changes in NOx emissions because isoprene and NOx emissions are spatially segregated. GEOS-Chem with reduced NOx emissions provides an unbiased simulation of ozone observations from the aircraft, and reproduces the observed ozone production efficiency in the boundary layer as derived from a regression of ozone and NOx oxidation products. However, the model is still biased high by 8±13 ppb relative to observed surface ozone in the Southeast US. Ozonesondes launched during midday hours show a 7 ppb ozone decrease from 1.5 km to the surface that GEOS-Chem does not capture. This bias may reflect a combination of excessive vertical mixing and net ozone production in the model boundary layer.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2003

Use of proton-transfer-reaction mass spectrometry to characterize volatile organic compound sources at the La Porte super site during the Texas Air Quality Study 2000

Thomas Karl; Tom Jobson; William C. Kuster; Eric J. Williams; J. Stutz; Richard E. Shetter; Samuel R. Hall; Paul D. Goldan; Fred C. Fehsenfeld; W. Lindinger

[1] Proton-transfer-reaction mass spectrometry (PTR-MS) was deployed for continuous real-time monitoring of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) at a site near the Houston Ship Channel during the Texas Air Quality Study 2000. Overall, 28 ions dominated the PTR-MS mass spectra and were assigned as anthropogenic aromatics (e.g., benzene, toluene, xylenes) and hydrocarbons (propene, isoprene), oxygenated compounds (e.g., formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, acetone, methanol, C7 carbonyls), and three nitrogencontaining compounds (e.g., HCN, acetonitrile and acrylonitrile). Biogenic VOCs were minor components at this site. Propene was the most abundant lightweight hydrocarbon detected by this technique with concentrations up to 100+ nmol mol � 1 , and was highly correlated with its oxidation products, formaldehyde (up to � 40 nmol mol � 1 ) and acetaldehyde (up to � 80 nmol/mol), with typical ratios close to 1 in propene-dominated plumes. In the case of aromatic species the high time resolution of the obtained data set helped in identifying different anthropogenic sources (e.g., industrial from urban emissions) and testing current emission inventories. A comparison with results from complimentary techniques (gas chromatography, differential optical absorption spectroscopy) was used to assess the selectivity of this on-line technique in a complex urban and industrial VOC matrix and give an interpretation of mass scans obtained by ‘‘soft’’ chemical ionization using proton-transfer via H3O + . The method was especially valuable in monitoring rapidly changing VOC plumes which passed over the site, and when coupled with meteorological data it was possible to identify likely sources. INDEX TERMS: 0322 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Constituent sources and sinks; 0345 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Pollution—urban and regional (0305); 0365 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Troposphere—composition and chemistry; KEYWORDS: PTR-MS, VOC, air quality, Houston, ozone


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Detection of iodine monoxide in the tropical free troposphere

B. Dix; Sunil Baidar; James F. Bresch; Samuel R. Hall; K. Sebastian Schmidt; Siyuan Wang; R. Volkamer

Atmospheric iodine monoxide (IO) is a radical that catalytically destroys heat trapping ozone and reacts further to form aerosols. Here, we report the detection of IO in the tropical free troposphere (FT). We present vertical profiles from airborne measurements over the Pacific Ocean that show significant IO up to 9.5 km altitude and locate, on average, two-thirds of the total column above the marine boundary layer. IO was observed in both recent deep convective outflow and aged free tropospheric air, suggesting a widespread abundance in the FT over tropical oceans. Our vertical profile measurements imply that most of the IO signal detected by satellites over tropical oceans could originate in the FT, which has implications for our understanding of iodine sources. Surprisingly, the IO concentration remains elevated in a transition layer that is decoupled from the ocean surface. This elevated concentration aloft is difficult to reconcile with our current understanding of iodine lifetimes and may indicate heterogeneous recycling of iodine from aerosols back to the gas phase. Chemical model simulations reveal that the iodine-induced ozone loss occurs mostly above the marine boundary layer (34%), in the transition layer (40%) and FT (26%) and accounts for up to 20% of the overall tropospheric ozone loss rate in the upper FT. Our results suggest that the halogen-driven ozone loss in the FT is currently underestimated. More research is needed to quantify the widespread impact that iodine species of marine origin have on free tropospheric composition, chemistry, and climate.


web science | 2003

Photolysis frequency of NO2: Measurement and modeling during the International Photolysis Frequency Measurement and Modeling Intercomparison (IPMMI)

Richard E. Shetter; W. Junkermann; William H. Swartz; G. J. Frost; J. H. Crawford; Barry Lefer; J. Barrick; Samuel R. Hall; Andreas Hofzumahaus; A. F. Bais; Jack G. Calvert; C. A. Cantrell; Sasha Madronich; M. Müller; A. Kraus; Paul S. Monks; Gavin D. Edwards; Richard McKenzie; P. V. Johnston; R. Schmitt; E. Griffioen; Maarten C. Krol; Arve Kylling; Russell R. Dickerson; Steven A. Lloyd; T. Martin; B. G. Gardiner; Bernhard Mayer; G. G. Pfister; E. P. Röth

[1] The photolysis frequency of NO2, j(NO2), was determined by various instrumental techniques and calculated using a number of radiative transfer models for 4 days in June 1998 at the International Photolysis Frequency Measurement and Modeling Intercomparison (IPMMI) in Boulder, Colorado. Experimental techniques included filter radiometry, spectroradiometry, and chemical actinometry. Eight research groups participated using 14 different instruments to determine j(NO2). The blind intercomparison experimental results were submitted to the independent experimental referee and have been compared. Also submitted to the modeling referee were the results of NO2 photolysis frequency calculations for the same time period made by 13 groups who used 15 different radiative transfer models. These model results have been compared with each other and also with the experimental results. The model calculation of clear-sky j(NO2) values can yield accurate results, but the accuracy depends heavily on the accuracy of the molecular parameters used in these calculations. The instrumental measurements of j(NO2) agree to within the uncertainty of the individual instruments and indicate the stated uncertainties in the instruments or the uncertainties of the molecular parameters may be overestimated. This agreement improves somewhat with the use of more recent NO2 cross-section data reported in the literature. INDEX TERMS: 0360 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Transmission and scattering of radiation; 0365 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Troposphere—composition and chemistry; 0394 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Instruments and techniques; KEYWORDS: photolysis, NO2 (nitrogen dioxide), radiative transfer, intercomparison Citation: Shetter, R. E., et al., Photolysis frequency of NO2: Measurement and modeling during the International Photolysis Frequency Measurement and Modeling Intercomparison (IPMMI), J. Geophys. Res., 108(D16), 8544, doi:10.1029/2002JD002932, 2003.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Active and widespread halogen chemistry in the tropical and subtropical free troposphere

Siyuan Wang; Johan A. Schmidt; Sunil Baidar; Sean Coburn; B. Dix; Theodore K. Koenig; Eric C. Apel; Dene Bowdalo; Teresa L. Campos; Ed Eloranta; M. J. Evans; Joshua Digangi; Mark A. Zondlo; Ru Shan Gao; Julie Haggerty; Samuel R. Hall; Rebecca S. Hornbrook; Daniel J. Jacob; Bruce Morley; Bradley Pierce; M. Reeves; Pavel Romashkin; Arnout ter Schure; R. Volkamer

Significance Our measurements show that tropospheric halogen chemistry has a larger capacity to destroy O3 and oxidize atmospheric mercury than previously recognized. Halogen chemistry is currently missing in most global and climate models, and is effective at removing O3 at altitudes where intercontinental O3 transport occurs. It further helps explain the low O3 levels in preindustrial times. Public health concerns arise from bioaccumulation of the neurotoxin mercury in fish. Our results emphasize that bromine chemistry in the free troposphere oxidizes mercury at a faster rate, and makes water-soluble mercury available for scavenging by thunderstorms. Naturally occurring bromine in air aloft illustrates global interconnectedness between energy choices affecting mercury emissions in developing nations and mercury deposition in, e.g., Nevada, or the southeastern United States. Halogens in the troposphere are increasingly recognized as playing an important role for atmospheric chemistry, and possibly climate. Bromine and iodine react catalytically to destroy ozone (O3), oxidize mercury, and modify oxidative capacity that is relevant for the lifetime of greenhouse gases. Most of the tropospheric O3 and methane (CH4) loss occurs at tropical latitudes. Here we report simultaneous measurements of vertical profiles of bromine oxide (BrO) and iodine oxide (IO) in the tropical and subtropical free troposphere (10°N to 40°S), and show that these halogens are responsible for 34% of the column-integrated loss of tropospheric O3. The observed BrO concentrations increase strongly with altitude (∼3.4 pptv at 13.5 km), and are 2–4 times higher than predicted in the tropical free troposphere. BrO resembles model predictions more closely in stratospheric air. The largest model low bias is observed in the lower tropical transition layer (TTL) over the tropical eastern Pacific Ocean, and may reflect a missing inorganic bromine source supplying an additional 2.5–6.4 pptv total inorganic bromine (Bry), or model overestimated Bry wet scavenging. Our results highlight the importance of heterogeneous chemistry on ice clouds, and imply an additional Bry source from the debromination of sea salt residue in the lower TTL. The observed levels of bromine oxidize mercury up to 3.5 times faster than models predict, possibly increasing mercury deposition to the ocean. The halogen-catalyzed loss of tropospheric O3 needs to be considered when estimating past and future ozone radiative effects.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2003

Peroxy radical behavior during the Transport and Chemical Evolution over the Pacific (TRACE‐P) campaign as measured aboard the NASA P‐3B aircraft

C. A. Cantrell; Gavin D. Edwards; S. Stephens; R. L. Mauldin; Mark A. Zondlo; E. Kosciuch; F. L. Eisele; Richard E. Shetter; Barry Lefer; Samuel R. Hall; F. Flocke; Andrew J. Weinheimer; Alan Fried; Eric C. Apel; Yutaka Kondo; D. R. Blake; Nicola J. Blake; Isobel J. Simpson; Alan R. Bandy; Donald C. Thornton; Brian G. Heikes; Hanwant B. Singh; William H. Brune; H. Harder; M. Martinez-Harder; M. Avery; S. A. Vay; J. Barrick; G. W. Sachse; J. R. Olsen

[1] Peroxy radical concentrations were measured aboard the NASA P-3B aircraft during the Transport and Chemical Evolution over the Pacific (TRACE-P) campaign in the spring of 2001 and varied in ways that depended on radical production rates and reactive nitrogen concentrations. Measurements of HO2 ,H O2 +R O2, and OH during this study allowed calculation of radical ratios, examination of functional relationships of these ratios on controlling variables, and comparison with numerical model estimations. Radical production terms show changes in relative contributions at low, middle, and high total production rates that are understandable in terms of systematic variations in the controlling components (trace gas concentrations and photolysis rate coefficients). Ozone tendency calculations indicate net ozone production in the western Pacific basin because the concentrations of critical precursor trace gases (e.g., NOx, hydrocarbons) are highest there. The dependence of ozone tendency follows the concentration of NO systematically. Peroxy radical levels on the two aircraft (HO2 +R O2 on the P-3B and HO2 on the DC-8) during two relatively short prescribed intercomparison periods were in good agreement in one instance and poorer in another given reasonable assumptions about the apportioning of radicals between HO2 and RO2. Recommended changes to CH2O photolysis quantum yields, HO2 self reaction, and O( 1 D) quenching kinetics lead to small changes (<5%) in calculated peroxy radical levels for TRACE-P conditions. There is evidence from this campaign that peroxy radicals are lost by interaction with aerosols and cloud droplets. INDEX TERMS: 0317 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Chemical kinetic and photochemical properties; 0322 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Constituent sources and sinks; 0365 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Troposphere—composition and chemistry; 0368 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Troposphere—constituent transport and chemistry; KEYWORDS: photochemistry, peroxy radicals, ozone


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Oxidation of mercury by bromine in the subtropical Pacific free troposphere

Lynne E. Gratz; Jesse L. Ambrose; Daniel A. Jaffe; Viral Shah; Lyatt Jaeglé; J. Stutz; James Festa; Max Spolaor; Catalina Tsai; Noelle E. Selin; Shaojie Song; X. Zhou; Andrew J. Weinheimer; D. J. Knapp; D. D. Montzka; F. Flocke; Teresa L. Campos; Eric C. Apel; Rebecca S. Hornbrook; Nicola J. Blake; Samuel R. Hall; Geoffrey S. Tyndall; M. Reeves; D. Stechman; Meghan Stell

Mercury is a global toxin that can be introduced to ecosystems through atmospheric deposition. Mercury oxidation is thought to occur in the free troposphere by bromine radicals, but direct observational evidence for this process is currently unavailable. During the 2013 Nitrogen, Oxidants, Mercury and Aerosol Distributions, Sources and Sinks campaign, we measured enhanced oxidized mercury and bromine monoxide in a free tropospheric air mass over Texas. We use trace gas measurements, air mass back trajectories, and a chemical box model to confirm the origin and chemical history of the sampled air mass. We find the presence of elevated oxidized mercury to be consistent with oxidation of elemental mercury by bromine atoms in this subsiding upper tropospheric air mass within the subtropical Pacific High, where dry atmospheric conditions are conducive to oxidized mercury accumulation. Our results support the role of bromine as the dominant oxidant of mercury in the upper troposphere.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008

Role of convection in redistributing formaldehyde to the upper troposphere over North America and the North Atlantic during the summer 2004 INTEX campaign

Alan Fried; J. R. Olson; James G. Walega; J. H. Crawford; G. Chen; Petter Weibring; Dirk Richter; Chad Roller; Frank K. Tittel; Michael Porter; Henry E. Fuelberg; Jeremy Halland; Timothy H. Bertram; R. C. Cohen; Kenneth E. Pickering; Brian G. Heikes; Julie A. Snow; Haiwei Shen; Daniel W. O'Sullivan; William H. Brune; Xinrong Ren; D. R. Blake; Nicola J. Blake; Glen W. Sachse; Glenn S. Diskin; James R. Podolske; S. A. Vay; Richard E. Shetter; Samuel R. Hall; Bruce E. Anderson

Measurements of formaldehyde (CH2O) from a tunable diode laser absorption spectrometer (TDLAS) were acquired onboard the NASA DC-8 aircraft during the summer 2004 INTEX-NA campaign to test our understanding of convection and CH2O production mechanisms in the upper troposphere (UT, 6–12 km) over continental North America and the North Atlantic Ocean. The present study utilizes these TDLAS measurements and results from a box model to (1) establish sets of conditions by which to distinguish “background” UT CH2O levels from those perturbed by convection and other causes; (2) quantify the CH2O precursor budgets for both air mass types; (3) quantify the fraction of time that the UT CH2O measurements over North America and North Atlantic are perturbed during the summer of 2004; (4) provide estimates for the fraction of time that such perturbed CH2O levels are caused by direct convection of boundary layer CH2O and/or convection of CH2O precursors; (5) assess the ability of box models to reproduce the CH2O measurements; and (6) examine CH2O and HO2 relationships in the presence of enhanced NO. Multiple tracers were used to arrive at a set of UT CH2O background and perturbed air mass periods, and 46% of the TDLAS measurements fell within the latter category. In general, production of CH2O from CH4 was found to be the dominant source term, even in perturbed air masses. This was followed by production from methyl hydroperoxide, methanol, PAN-type compounds, and ketones, in descending order of their contribution. At least 70% to 73% of the elevated UT observations were caused by enhanced production from CH2O precursors rather than direct transport of CH2O from the boundary layer. In the presence of elevated NO, there was a definite trend in the CH2O measurement–model discrepancy, and this was highly correlated with HO2 measurement–model discrepancies in the UT.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Agricultural fires in the southeastern U.S. during SEAC4RS: Emissions of trace gases and particles and evolution of ozone, reactive nitrogen, and organic aerosol

Xiaoxi Liu; Yuzhong Zhang; L. G. Huey; Robert J. Yokelson; Yang Wang; J. L. Jimenez; Pedro Campuzano-Jost; A. J. Beyersdorf; D. R. Blake; Yonghoon Choi; J. M. St. Clair; John D. Crounse; Douglas A. Day; Glenn S. Diskin; Alan Fried; Samuel R. Hall; T. F. Hanisco; Laura E. King; Simone Meinardi; Tomas Mikoviny; Brett B. Palm; J. Peischl; A. E. Perring; Ilana B. Pollack; T. B. Ryerson; G. W. Sachse; Joshua P. Schwarz; Isobel J. Simpson; David J. Tanner; K. L. Thornhill

Emissions from 15 agricultural fires in the southeastern U.S. were measured from the NASA DC-8 research aircraft during the summer 2013 Studies of Emissions and Atmospheric Composition, Clouds and Climate Coupling by Regional Surveys (SEAC^4RS) campaign. This study reports a detailed set of emission factors (EFs) for 25 trace gases and 6 fine particle species. The chemical evolution of the primary emissions in seven plumes was examined in detail for ~1.2 h. A Lagrangian plume cross-section model was used to simulate the evolution of ozone (O_3), reactive nitrogen species, and organic aerosol (OA). Observed EFs are generally consistent with previous measurements of crop residue burning, but the fires studied here emitted high amounts of SO_2 and fine particles, especially primary OA and chloride. Filter-based measurements of aerosol light absorption implied that brown carbon (BrC) was ubiquitous in the plumes. In aged plumes, rapid production of O_3, peroxyacetyl nitrate (PAN), and nitrate was observed with ΔO_3/ΔCO, ΔPAN/ΔNO_y, and Δnitrate/ΔNO_y reaching ~0.1, ~0.3, and ~0.3. For five selected cases, the model reasonably simulated O_3 formation but underestimated PAN formation. No significant evolution of OA mass or BrC absorption was observed. However, a consistent increase in oxygen-to-carbon (O/C) ratios of OA indicated that OA oxidation in the agricultural fire plumes was much faster than in urban and forest fire plumes. Finally, total annual SO_2, NO_x, and CO emissions from agricultural fires in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Missouri were estimated (within a factor of ~2) to be equivalent to ~2% SO_2 from coal combustion and ~1% NO_x and ~9% CO from mobile sources.

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Kirk Ullmann

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Eric C. Apel

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Andrew J. Weinheimer

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Rebecca S. Hornbrook

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Richard E. Shetter

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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C. A. Cantrell

University of Colorado Boulder

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F. Flocke

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Teresa L. Campos

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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D. R. Blake

University of California

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