• Title of article

    Measurement and analysis of atmospheric concentrations of isoprene and its reaction products in central Texas

  • Author/Authors

    Christine Wiedinmyer، نويسنده , , Stephen Friedfeld، نويسنده , , William Baugh، نويسنده , , Jim Greenberg، نويسنده , , Alex Guenther، نويسنده , , Matthew Fraser، نويسنده , , David Allen، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
  • Pages
    13
  • From page
    1001
  • To page
    1013
  • Abstract
    A field experiment was conducted in August 1998 to investigate the concentrations of isoprene and isoprene reaction products in the surface and mixed layers of the atmosphere in Central Texas. Measured near ground-level concentrations of isoprene ranged from 0.3 (lower limit of detection – LLD) to 10.2 ppbv in rural regions and from 0.3 to 6.0 ppbv in the Austin urban area. Rural ambient formaldehyde levels ranged from 0.4 ppbv (LLD) to 20.0 ppbv for 160 rural samples collected, while the observed range was smaller at Austin (0.4–3.4 ppbv) for a smaller set of samples (37 urban samples collected). Methacrolein levels did not vary as widely, with rural measurements from 0.1 ppbv (LLD) to 3.7 ppbv and urban concentrations varying between 0.2 and 5.7 ppbv. Isoprene flux measurements, calculated using a simple box model and measured mixed-layer isoprene concentrations, were in reasonable agreement with emission estimates based on local ground cover data. Ozone formation attributable to biogenic hydrocarbon oxidation was also calculated. The calculations indicated that if the ozone formation occurred at low VOC/NOx ratios, up to 20 ppbv of ozone formed could be attributable to biogenic photooxidation. In contrast, if the biogenic hydrocarbon reaction products were formed under low NOx conditions, ozone production attributable to biogenics oxidation would be as low as 1 ppbv. This variability in ozone formation potentials implies that biogenic emissions in rural areas will not lead to peak ozone levels in the absence of transport of NOx from urban centers or large rural NOx sources.
  • Keywords
    isoprene , Isoprene reactions , Biogenic emissions , Ozone formation , Texas
  • Journal title
    Atmospheric Environment
  • Serial Year
    2001
  • Journal title
    Atmospheric Environment
  • Record number

    756347