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Techniques for Estimating Emissions Factors from Forest Burning: ARCTAS and SEAC4RS Airborne Measurements Indicate Which Fires Produce OzonePrevious studies of emission factors from biomass burning are prone to large errors since they ignore the interplay of mixing and varying pre-fire background CO2 levels. Such complications severely affected our studies of 446 forest fire plume samples measured in the Western US by the science teams of NASA's SEAC4RS and ARCTAS airborne missions. Consequently we propose a Mixed Effects Regression Emission Technique (MERET) to check techniques like the Normalized Emission Ratio Method (NERM), where use of sequential observations cannot disentangle emissions and mixing. We also evaluate a simpler "consensus" technique. All techniques relate emissions to fuel burned using C(sub burn) = delta C(sub tot) added to the fire plume, where C(sub tot) approximately equals (CO2 + CO). Mixed-effects regression can estimate pre-fire background values of Ctot (indexed by observation j) simultaneously with emissions factors indexed by individual species i, delta epsilon lambda tau alpha−x(sub i)/(C(sub burn))i,j., MERET and "consensus" require more than two emissions indicators. Our studies excluded samples where exogenous CO or CH4 might have been fed into a fire plume, mimicking emission. We sought to let the data on 13 gases and particulate properties suggest clusters of variables and plume types, using non-negative matrix factorization (NMF). While samples were mixtures, the NMF unmixing suggested purer burn types. Particulate properties (bscat, babs, SSA, AAE) and gas-phase emissions were interrelated. Finally, we sought a simple categorization useful for modeling ozone production in plumes. Two kinds of fires produced high ozone: those with large fuel nitrogen as evidenced by remnant CH3CN in the plumes, and also those from very intense large burns. Fire types with optimal ratios of delta-NOy/delta- HCHO associate with the highest additional ozone per unit Cburn, Perhaps these plumes exhibit limited NOx binding to reactive organics. Perhaps these plumes exhibit limited NOx binding to reactive organics.
Document ID
20160006479
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Abstract
Authors
Chatfield, Robert B.
(NASA Ames Research Center Moffett Field, CA United States)
Andreae, Meinrat O.
(Max-Planck-Inst. fuer Chemie Mainz, Germany)
Date Acquired
May 20, 2016
Publication Date
August 2, 2015
Subject Category
Environment Pollution
Earth Resources And Remote Sensing
Report/Patent Number
ARC-E-DAA-TN30016
Report Number: ARC-E-DAA-TN30016
Meeting Information
Meeting: Atmospheric Chemistry Gordon Research Conference - Multiphase Processes: Observations and Fundamentals
Location: Waterville Valley, NH
Country: United States
Start Date: August 2, 2015
End Date: August 7, 2015
Sponsors: Gordon Research Conferences, Inc., NASA Headquarters
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
fires
plumes
ozone
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