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  4. Implementation of the ISORROPIA-lite aerosol thermodynamics model into the EMAC chemistry climate model (based on MESSy v2.55): implications for aerosol composition and acidity
 
research article

Implementation of the ISORROPIA-lite aerosol thermodynamics model into the EMAC chemistry climate model (based on MESSy v2.55): implications for aerosol composition and acidity

Milousis, Alexandros
•
Tsimpidi, Alexandra P.
•
Tost, Holger
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February 12, 2024
Geoscientific Model Development

This study explores the differences in performance and results by various versions of the ISORROPIA thermodynamic module implemented within the ECHAM/MESSy Atmospheric Chemistry (EMAC) model. Three different versions of the module were used, ISORROPIA II v1, ISORROPIA II v2.3, and ISORROPIA-lite. First, ISORROPIA II v2.3 replaced ISORROPIA II v1 in EMAC to improve pH predictions close to neutral conditions. The newly developed ISORROPIA-lite has been added to EMAC alongside ISORROPIA II v2.3. ISORROPIA-lite is more computationally efficient and assumes that atmospheric aerosols exist always as supersaturated aqueous (metastable) solutions, while ISORROPIA II includes the option to allow for the formation of solid salts at low RH conditions (stable state). The predictions of EMAC by employing all three aerosol thermodynamic models were compared to each other and evaluated against surface measurements from three regional observational networks in the polluted Northern Hemisphere (Interagency Monitoring of Protected Visual Environments (IMPROVE), European Monitoring and Evaluation Programme (EMEP), and Acid Deposition Monitoring Network of East Asia (EANET)). The differences between ISORROPIA II v2.3 and ISORROPIA-lite were minimal in all comparisons with the normalized mean absolute difference for the concentrations of all major aerosol components being less than 11 % even when different phase state assumptions were used. The most notable differences were lower aerosol concentrations predicted by ISORROPIA-lite in regions with relative humidity in the range of 20 % to 60 % compared to the predictions of ISORROPIA II v2.3 in stable mode. The comparison against observations yielded satisfactory agreement especially over the USA and Europe but higher deviations over East Asia, where the overprediction of EMAC for nitrate was as high as 4 mu g m-3 (similar to 20%). The mean annual aerosol pH predicted by ISORROPIA-lite was on average less than a unit lower than ISORROPIA II v2.3 in stable mode, mainly for coarse-mode aerosols over the Middle East. The use of ISORROPIA-lite accelerated EMAC by nearly 5 % compared to the use of ISORROPIA II v2.3 even if the aerosol thermodynamic calculations consume a relatively small fraction of the EMAC computational time. ISORROPIA-lite can therefore be a reliable and computationally efficient alternative to the previous thermodynamic module in EMAC.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.5194/gmd-17-1111-2024
Web of Science ID

WOS:001188865200001

Author(s)
Milousis, Alexandros
Tsimpidi, Alexandra P.
Tost, Holger
Pandis, Spyros N.
Nenes, Athanasios  
Kiendler-Scharr, Astrid
Karydis, Vlassis A.
Date Issued

2024-02-12

Publisher

Copernicus Gesellschaft Mbh

Published in
Geoscientific Model Development
Volume

17

Issue

3

Start page

1111

End page

1131

Subjects

Physical Sciences

•

Submodel System Messy

•

Particulate Matter

•

Equilibrium-Model

•

Organic Aerosol

•

Technical Note

•

Air-Pollution

•

Activity-Coefficients

•

Inorganic Aerosols

•

United-States

•

Mineral Dust

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LAPI  
FunderGrant Number

European Union

821205

Available on Infoscience
April 17, 2024
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/207253
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