New SOA Treatments Within the Energy Exascale Earth System Model (E3SM): Strong Production and Sinks Govern Atmospheric SOA Distributions and Radiative Forcing

Secondary organic aerosols (SOA) are large contributors to fine particle mass loading and number concentration and interact with clouds and radiation. Several processes affect the formation, chemical transformation, and removal of SOA in the atmosphere. For computational efficiency, global models us...

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Published inJournal of advances in modeling earth systems Vol. 12; no. 12
Main Authors Lou, Sijia, Shrivastava, Manish, Easter, Richard C., Yang, Yang, Ma, Po‐Lun, Wang, Hailong, Cubison, Michael J., Campuzano‐Jost, Pedro, Jimenez, Jose L., Zhang, Qi, Rasch, Philip J., Shilling, John E., Zelenyuk, Alla, Dubey, Manvendra, Cameron‐Smith, Philip, Martin, Scot T., Schneider, Johannes, Schulz, Christiane
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Washington John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.12.2020
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
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Summary:Secondary organic aerosols (SOA) are large contributors to fine particle mass loading and number concentration and interact with clouds and radiation. Several processes affect the formation, chemical transformation, and removal of SOA in the atmosphere. For computational efficiency, global models use simplified SOA treatments, which often do not capture the dynamics of SOA formation. Here we test more complex SOA treatments within the global Energy Exascale Earth System Model (E3SM) to investigate how simulated SOA spatial distributions respond to some of the important but uncertain processes affecting SOA formation, removal, and lifetime. We evaluate model predictions with a suite of surface, aircraft, and satellite observations that span the globe and the full troposphere. Simulations indicate that both a strong production (achieved here by multigenerational aging of SOA precursors that includes moderate functionalization) and a strong sink of SOA (especially in the middle upper troposphere, achieved here by adding particle‐phase photolysis) are needed to reproduce the vertical distribution of organic aerosol (OA) measured during several aircraft field campaigns; without this sink, the simulated middle upper tropospheric OA is too large. Our results show that variations in SOA chemistry formulations change SOA wet removal lifetime by a factor of 3 due to changes in horizontal and vertical distributions of SOA. In all the SOA chemistry formulations tested here, an efficient chemical sink, that is, particle‐phase photolysis, was needed to reproduce the aircraft measurements of OA at high altitudes. Globally, SOA removal rates by photolysis are equal to the wet removal sink, and photolysis decreases SOA lifetimes from 10 to ~3 days. A recent review of multiple field studies found no increase in net OA formation over and downwind biomass burning regions, so we also tested an alternative, empirical SOA treatment that increases primary organic aerosol (POA) emissions near source region and converts POA to SOA with an aging time scale of 1 day. Although this empirical treatment performs surprisingly well in simulating OA loadings near the surface, it overestimates OA loadings in the middle and upper troposphere compared to aircraft measurements, likely due to strong convective transport to high altitudes where wet removal is weak. The default improved model formulation (multigenerational aging with moderate fragmentation and photolysis) performs much better than the empirical treatment in these regions. Differences in SOA treatments greatly affect the SOA direct radiative effect, which ranges from −0.65 (moderate fragmentation and photolysis) to −2 W m−2 (moderate fragmentation without photolysis). Notably, most SOA formulations predict similar global indirect forcing of SOA calculated as the difference in cloud forcing between present‐day and preindustrial simulations. Plain language Summary Secondary organic aerosols (SOA) are formed in the atmosphere by oxidation of organic gases emitted from natural biogenic, anthropogenic, and biomass burning sources. In many regions of the atmosphere, SOA greatly contributes to fine particle mass loadings and number concentrations and affects clouds and radiation. Integrating insights from global atmospheric modeling and measurements, we show that strong chemical production achieved here by multigenerational chemistry including moderate fragmentation of SOA precursors and strong chemical sinks represented by particle‐phase photolysis are needed to explain the aircraft‐observed vertical profiles of SOA over multiple regions including North America, equatorial oceans, and the Southern Ocean. Photolysis reduces simulated global SOA lifetimes from 10 to 3 days. Within the same model physics and cloud treatments, we show that changes in SOA chemistry formulations change SOA wet removal lifetimes by a factor of 3. Simulations show that SOA exerts a strong direct radiative forcing in the present day ranging from −0.65 to −2 W m−2. Future measurements and modeling are needed to better constrain the photolytic and heterogeneous chemical removal of SOA at high‐altitude atmospheric conditions. Key Points Gas‐phase multi‐generational aging of SOA precursors is a strong source Loss processes such as gas‐phase fragmentation pathways for SOA products need to be included for a more realistic model representation of OA Both strong sources and sinks are needed to explain global SOA distributions
Bibliography:National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
AC05-76RL01830; NNX15AH33A; 80NSSC19K0124; SC0014620; AC52‐07NA27344; AC52-07NA27344; AC06‐76RL01830
PNNL-SA-156400; LLNL-JRNL-823088
USDOE Office of Science (SC), Basic Energy Sciences (BES)
USDOE National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA)
ISSN:1942-2466
1942-2466
DOI:10.1029/2020MS002266