Meteorology during the DOMINO campaign and its connection with trace gases and aerosols
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Abstract
The DOMINO (Diel Oxidant Mechanisms in relation
to Nitrogen Oxides) campaign was carried out from
21 November to 8 December 2008 at the El Arenosillo station
(SW of Spain) in a coastal-rural environment. The main
weather conditions are analysed using local meteorological
variables, meteorological soundings and synoptic maps, as
well as back trajectories of the air masses using the HYSPLIT
(Hybrid Single-Particle Lagrangian Integrated Trajectory
Model) model and a high spatial resolution of meteorological
fields. Measurements of the main meteorological parameters
were collected both from the surface and from a tall
tower. A detailed land use analysis was performed on a 80 km
scale showing the main types of vegetation and land use.
Also the main anthropogenic atmospheric emission sources –
both industrial-urban from Huelva and from the urban Seville
area – are shown. A study to identify air mass origins and
their variation with height was carried out. In this intensive
campaign, air masses coming from different areas with different
emission sources were observed: from the NW, with
a highly industrial-urban character; continental flows from
northerly directions; from the NE, with a pathway starting
over the Seville metropolitan area and then continuing over
the Doñana National Park; and maritime air masses coming
from the Atlantic Ocean. To study the chemistry in the
four atmospheric scenarios identified, gas -phase measurements
of primary and secondary species such as ozone, NO,
NO2 and SO2, biogenic and anthropogenic VOCs (volatile
organic compounds) like benzene and isoprene, as well as
total particle concentration and chemical composition of the
aerosols are compared and discussed. The highest levels for
total particle concentration, NO, NO2, SO2, benzene, PM10,
PM2.5 and chemical elements such as As or Cu were found
under flows associated with industrial-urban emissions from
the Huelva–Portugal sector which are transported to the site
before significant removal by chemical or deposition mechanism
can occur. The air masses from the north were affected
mainly by crustal elements and biogenic sources, the latter
being exemplified by the biogenic species such as isoprene,
particularly in the first part of the campaign. The urban air
from the Seville area, before arriving at El Arenosillo, traversed
the Doñana National Park and therefore was affected
by industrial-urban and biogenic emissions. This aged air parcel can transport low levels of NOx, total particle concentration
and SO2 as well as ozone and isoprene. Marine air
masses from the Atlantic Ocean influence El Arenosillo frequently.
Under these conditions, the lowest levels of almost
all the species – with the exception of ozone levels associated
to long-range transport – were measured.
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Bibliographic citation
Adame Carnero, J. A., Martínez, M., Sorribas, M., Hidalgo Fernández, P. J., Harder, H., Diesch, J. M., Drewnick, F.; Song, W., Williams, J., Sinha, V., Hernández Ceballos, M. A., Vilà-Guerau de Arellano, J., Sander, R., Hosaynali-Beygi, Z., Fischer, H., Lelieveld, J., Morena, B. A.: "Meteorology during the DOMINO campaign and its connection with trace gases and aerosols". Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics. Vol. 14, págs. 2325–2342 (2014). ISSN 1680-7316














