Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (Sep 2009)

Measurements of OH and HO<sub>2</sub> concentrations during the MCMA-2006 field campaign – Part 2: Model comparison and radical budget

  • M. Dubey,
  • T. Rahn,
  • W. Junkermann,
  • J. Zheng,
  • E. C. Fortner,
  • R. Zhang,
  • A. Merten,
  • D. Blake,
  • P. Sheehy,
  • A. Baker,
  • S. Meinardi,
  • L. T. Molina,
  • R. Volkamer,
  • P. S. Stevens,
  • D. Vimal,
  • S. Dusanter,
  • B. Eichinger,
  • P. Lewandowski,
  • J. Prueger,
  • H. Holder

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 18
pp. 6655 – 6675

Abstract

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Measurements of hydroxyl (OH) and hydroperoxy (HO2) radicals were made during the Mexico City Metropolitan Area (MCMA) field campaign as part of the MILAGRO (Megacity Initiative: Local and Global Research Observations) project during March 2006. These measurements provide a unique opportunity to test current models of atmospheric ROx (OH + HO2 + RO2) photochemistry under polluted conditions. A zero-dimensional box model based on the Regional Atmospheric Chemical Mechanism (RACM) was constrained by 10-min averages of 24 J-values and the concentrations of 97 chemical species. Several issues related to the ROx chemistry under polluted conditions are highlighted in this study: (i) Measured concentrations of both OH and HO2 were underpredicted during morning hours on a median campaign basis, suggesting a significant source of radicals is missing from current atmospheric models under polluted conditions, consistent with previous urban field campaigns. (ii) The model-predicted HO2/OH ratios underestimate the measurements for NO mixing ratios higher than 5 ppb, also consistent with previous urban field campaigns. This suggests that under high NOx conditions, the HO2 to OH propagation rate may be overestimated by the model or a process converting OH into HO2 may be missing from the chemical mechanism. On a daily basis (08:40 a.m.–06:40 p.m.), an analysis of the radical budget indicates that HONO photolysis, HCHO photolysis, O3-alkene reactions and dicarbonyls photolysis are the main radical sources. O3 photolysis contributes to less than 6% of the total radical production.