Frontiers in Environmental Science (Sep 2023)

Chemical kinetics of near-surface ozone at a suburban location in India

  • Vijay Kumar Sagar,
  • Vijay Kumar Sagar,
  • Asuri Lakshmi Kanchana,
  • Rabindra Kumar Nayak,
  • Suvarna Fadnavis,
  • Vijay P. Kanawade

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvs.2023.1178833
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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The spatial gradient in near-surface ozone (O3) is controlled by its production, sink, and net transport (advection/convection and diffusive) in the atmosphere. In this work, we used continuous long-term measurements of O3, oxides of nitrogen (NOx = NO + NO2), and meteorological data in the suburban location of Shadnagar, India. Data analyses were performed to investigate the governing processes that control O3 variability on diurnal and seasonal time scales. The role of chemistry in O3 variability, including both formation and destruction processes, was investigated using known chemical kinetics and a radiative transfer model. The residual between observations and chemical estimation was further analyzed to examine the role of transport and unresolved processes/uncertainty in the dataset. The O3 residual was duly validated using model reanalysis data of O3 and meteorological parameters to further estimate the O3 transport. Our analyses show that the average net production and net transport of near-surface O3 are 3.18 and 0.87 ppbv/h, respectively, while horizontal advection is 0.01 ppbv/h in the daytime. The production of ozone was found to be dominant, indicating the influx of ozone at the site. Overall, our results highlight that spatio-temporal variability in near-surface ozone is strongly controlled by net production in Shadnagar and may be applicable in similar environments globally.

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