Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene (Nov 2017)

Carbon monoxide isotopic measurements in Indianapolis constrain urban source isotopic signatures and support mobile fossil fuel emissions as the dominant wintertime CO source

  • Isaac J. Vimont,
  • Jocelyn C. Turnbull,
  • Vasilii V. Petrenko,
  • Philip F. Place,
  • Anna Karion,
  • Natasha L. Miles,
  • Scott J. Richardson,
  • Kevin Gurney,
  • Risa Patarasuk,
  • Colm Sweeney,
  • Bruce Vaughn,
  • James W.C. White

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1525/elementa.136
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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We present measurements of CO mole fraction and CO stable isotopes (δ13CO and δC18O) in air during the winters of 2013–14 and 2014–15 at tall tower sampling sites in and around Indianapolis, USA. A tower located upwind of the city was used to quantitatively remove the background CO signal, allowing for the first unambiguous isotopic characterization of the urban CO source and yielding 13CO of –27.7 ± 0.5‰ VPDB and C18O of 17.7 ± 1.1‰ VSMOW for this source. We use the tower isotope measurements, results from a limited traffic study, as well as atmospheric reaction rates to examine contributions from different sources to the Indianapolis CO budget. Our results are consistent with earlier findings that traffic emissions are the dominant source, suggesting a contribution of 96% or more to the overall Indianapolis wintertime CO emissions. Our results are also consistent with the hypothesis that emissions from a small fraction of vehicles without functional catalytic systems dominate the Indianapolis CO budget.

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