Publication | Open Access
The Wintertime Covariation of CO<sub>2</sub> and Criteria Pollutants in an Urban Valley of the Western United States
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Citations
68
References
2018
Year
EngineeringUrban Air QualityGreenhouse Gas EmissionAir QualityEarth ScienceSocial SciencesRegional Climate ResponseMicrometeorologyCo 2ExCriteria PollutantsPollutant TransportUrban ValleyClimate ChangeBiogeochemistryCarbon SequestrationGeographyCo 2Greenhouse Gas SequestrationEarth's ClimateWestern United StatesAir Pollution ClimatologyAtmospheric Impact AssessmentAir PollutionUrban ClimateAir Pools
Abstract Numerous mountain valleys experience wintertime particulate pollution events, when persistent cold air pools (PCAPs) develop and inhibit atmospheric mixing, leading to the accumulation of pollutants. Here we examine the relationships between trace gases and criteria pollutants during winter in Utah's Salt Lake Valley, in an effort to better understand the roles of transport versus chemical processes during differing meteorological conditions as well as insights into how targeted reductions in greenhouse gases will impact local air quality in varying meteorological conditions. CO 2 is a chemically inert gas that is coemitted during fossil fuel combustion with pollutants. Many of these coemitted pollutants are precursors that react chemically to form secondary particulate matter. Thus, CO 2 can serve as a stable tracer and potentially help distinguish transport versus chemical influences on pollutants. During the winter of 2015–2016, we isolated enhancements in CO 2 over baseline levels due to urban emissions (“CO 2ex ”). CO 2ex was paired with similar excesses in other pollutant concentrations. These relationships were examined during different wintertime conditions and stages of pollution episodes: (a) Non‐PCAP, (b) beginning, and (c) latter stages of an episode. We found that CO 2ex is a good indicator of the presence of gaseous criteria pollutants and a reasonable indicator of PM 2.5 . Additionally, the relationships between CO 2ex and criteria pollutants differ during different phases of PCAP events which provide insight into meteorological and transport processes. Lastly, we found a slight overestimation of CO:CO 2 emission ratios and a considerable overestimation of NO x :CO 2 by existing inventories for the Salt Lake Valley.
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