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  5. Effects of 2000-2050 Global Climate Change on Ozone and Particulate Matter Air Quality in the United States Using Models-3/CMAQ System
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Effects of 2000-2050 Global Climate Change on Ozone and Particulate Matter Air Quality in the United States Using Models-3/CMAQ System

Date Issued
August 1, 2010
Author(s)
Lam, Yun-Fat  
Advisor(s)
Joshua S. Fu
Additional Advisor(s)
Wayne T. Davis, John B. Drake, John S. Schwartz, and Russell L. Zaretzki
Permanent URI
https://trace.tennessee.edu/handle/20.500.14382/29383
Abstract

The Models-3/Community Multi-scale Air Quality modeling system (CMAQ), coupled with Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) atmospheric General Circulation Model (GCM), fifth Generation Mesoscale Model system (MM5), and Goddard Earth Observing System-CHEMistry (GEOS-Chem), was used to simulate atmospheric concentration of ozone and particulate matter over the continental United States 12-km and 36-km (CONUS) domains at year 2000 and year 2050. In the study, GISS GCM model outputs interfaced with MM5 were utilized to supply the current and future meteorological conditions for CMAQ. The conventional CMAQ profile initial and boundary conditions were replaced by time-varied and layer-varied GEOS-Chem outputs. The future emission concentrations were estimated using year 2000 based emissions with emission projections suggested by the IPCC A1B scenario. Multi-scenario statistical analyses were performed to investigate the effects of climate change and change of anthropogenic emissions toward 2050. The composite effects of these changes were broken down into individual effects and analyzed on three distinct regions (i.e., Midwest, Northeast and Southeast). The results of CMAQ hourly and 8-hour average concentrations indicate the maximum ozone concentration in the Midwest is increased slightly from year 2000 to year 2050, as a result of increasing average and maximum temperatures by 2 to 3 degrees Kelvin. In converse, there is an observed reduction of surface ozone concentration in the Southeast caused by the decrease in solar radiation. For the emission reduction scenario, the decline of anthropogenic emissions causes reductions of both ozone and PM2.5 for all regions. The emission reduction has compensated the effect of increasing temperature. The overall change on the maximum daily 8-hr ozone and average PM2.5 concentrations in year 2050 were estimated to be 10% and 40% less than the values in year 2000, respectively. The modeling results indicates the effect of emissions reduction has greater impact than the effect of climate change.

Subjects

CMAQ

GEOS-Chem

Interface

tropopause

future climate

future air quality

Disciplines
Environmental Engineering
Environmental Health and Protection
Environmental Indicators and Impact Assessment
Environmental Monitoring
Sustainability
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
Major
Civil Engineering
Embargo Date
December 1, 2011
File(s)
Thumbnail Image
Name

Final_corrected_Dissertation_YunFatLam_v3.pdf

Size

1.76 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

e7fd1a2f6275fae91b4d927dbcf2ce71

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