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GasParticle Interactions Working Group Summary

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Michael Alexander Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. Paul ... Sasha Madronich NCAR. Luisa Molina University of California at San Diego ... [Alexander] ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: GasParticle Interactions Working Group Summary


1
Gas-Particle InteractionsWorking Group Summary
Rahul Zaveri Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
  • Atmospheric Science Program Annual Meeting
  • Alexandria, VA
  • November 1, 2005

2
Attendees Affiliation
  • Michael Alexander Pacific Northwest National
    Laboratory
  • Paul Davidovits Boston College
  • Mike Ezell University of California at Irvine
  • Barbara Finlayson-Pitts University of California
    at Irvine
  • Mary Gilles Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory
  • Jose Jimenez University of Colorado, Boulder
  • Larry Kleinman Brookhaven National Laboratory
  • Chuck Kolb Aerodyne Research, Inc.
  • Alex Laskin Pacific Northwest National
    Laboratory
  • Sasha Madronich NCAR
  • Luisa Molina University of California at San
    Diego
  • Jay Slowik Boston College
  • Stephen Springston Brookhaven National Laboratory
  • Judy Weinstein-Lloyd SUNY Old Westbury
  • Rahul Zaveri, Chair Pacific Northwest National
    Laboratory
  • Paul Ziemann University of California, Riverside

3
Laboratory and Field Measurements Useful for
Developing, Constraining, and Evaluating Models
  • Characterization of secondary organic aerosol
    precursors, formation,
  • and processing
  • Field measurements of SOA and other species using
    AMS. Jimenez
  • Field measurements of secondary organic aerosols
    (SOA) and their precursors using the PTR-MS and
    AMS. Alexander
  • Rate constants of reactions of key oxidants with
    various particulate organic compounds, and their
    effects on hygroscopicity, CCN activity, and
    volatilization of reacted particles. Ziemann
  • Characterization of laboratory and field
    collected organic particles to produce
    structure-physical (hygroscopic and optical)
    properties relationships for SOA and nitrate
    particles. Finlayson-Pitts
  • Field measurements of chemical content of SOA,
    its precursors, and oxidants using DOAS, Aerodyne
    Mobile Laboratory, and a suite of other
    ground-based instruments. Molina, Kolb
  • Field measurements of SOA with the G-1 Kleinman,
    Berkowitz/Zaveri
  • Data sets from aircraft flights during ASP field
    campaigns of core chemical and aerosol
    properties. Springston, Lloyd, Hubbe

4
Laboratory and Field Measurements Useful for
Developing, Constraining, and Evaluating Models
  • Characterization and aging of black carbon (BC),
    mineral, and other
  • ambient particles
  • Characterization of BC particles with near-edge
    x-ray absorption spectra for BC surrogates,
    atmospheric particles containing soot/BC, and
    samples that do not contain BC and determine if
    x-ray microscopy imaging can be used to quantify
    the mixing state of BC particles. Gilles
  • Chemical, hygroscopic, and morphological
    characterization of bulk and individual particles
    (laboratory and field samples) containing BC,
    minerals, and other components using a variety of
    microscopic and spectroscopic techniques.
    Laskin
  • Physical and chemical properties of BC particles
    subjected to surface oxidation and coating with
    organic and inorganic species. Davidovits

5
Model Development, Improvement and Evaluation
  • Development and evaluation of improved process
    models using
  • laboratory and field measurements
  • Fully-explicit mechanisms for secondary organic
    aerosol (SOA) formation along with a repository
    of measured and estimated kinetic, mechanistic,
    thermodynamic, and spectroscopic data.
    Madronich
  • Comprehensive SOA representation in MOSAIC
    aerosol module and evaluation using laboratory
    and field measurements Madronich, Zaveri
  • Size- and composition-resolved gas-aerosol
    Lagrangian box-model incorporating laboratory
    findings on SOA formation, BC aging, and
    heterogeneous chemistry Zaveri

6
Path Forward
  • Model development and evaluation will require
    close collaboration
  • between modelers and experimentalists (lab and
    field).
  • Need to integrate laboratory findings into
    models.
  • Need to interface with other working groups
    better.
  • Time-resolved Lagrangian G-1 flights are needed
    in MAX-Mex and MAX-Tex for constraining and
    evaluating gas-particle process models of aerosol
    formation, evolution, and aging.
  • Ground measurements at T0, T1, T2 in MAX-Mex will
    be also useful for evaluating aerosol evolution
    and aging processes.
  • Propose a workshop on SOA measurements and
    modeling sometime late 2006?
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