Analysis of sources and partitioning of oxidant in the UK-Part 1: the NO"X-dependence of annual mean concentrations of nitrogen dioxide and ozone [An article from: Atmospheric Environment] Buy on Amazon

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Analysis of sources and partitioning of oxidant in the UK-Part 1: the NO"X-dependence of annual mean concentrations of nitrogen dioxide and ozone [An article from: Atmospheric Environment]

PublisherElsevier
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Author(s)M.E. Jenkin
PublisherElsevier
ISBN / ASINB000RR1GPE
ISBN-13978B000RR1GP9
AvailabilityAvailable for download now
MarketplaceUnited States  🇺🇸

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This digital document is a journal article from Atmospheric Environment, published by Elsevier in 2004. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

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A description of the NO"X-dependence of annual mean concentrations of nitrogen dioxide (NO"2) is an important component of empirical policy models used to investigate the impacts of NO"X emissions control measures. Consideration of nitric oxide (NO), NO"2 and ozone (O"3) as a set of chemically coupled species, rather than NO and NO"2 alone, is used to gain additional insights into the factors controlling ambient levels of NO"2 (and O"3), and how they vary with NO"X concentration. Monitoring data from 66 urban roadside, urban centre, urban background, suburban, urban industrial and rural sites in the UK are used in this analysis. Annual mean [NO"2] vs. [NO"X] and [O"3] vs. [NO"X] relationships are defined by establishing, first, how the concentration of `oxidant' ([OX], defined as [O"3]+[NO"2]) varies with [NO"X] and, secondly, how the fractional contributions of NO"2 and O"3 to OX (i.e., [NO"2]/[OX] and [O"3]/[OX]) vary with [NO"X]. This allows site-specific relationships describing the NO"X-dependence of annual mean NO"2 and O"3 concentrations to be recommended for 56 non-rural sites. The results are also used to derive representative expressions for different regions of the UK, and these are compared with those currently employed in national empirical modelling activities to calculate future annual mean NO"2 concentrations. Because the present methodology decouples factors which relate to chemical partitioning from those which relate to sources of oxidant, the expressions presented here have the flexibility to enable predictions that take account of modest future changes in regional oxidant (i.e. the background ozone level), or changes in local oxidant inputs (e.g., primary NO"2 emissions) which might arise, for example, from modifications in vehicle emissions control technologies or vehicle fleet composition.
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