Publication | Open Access
Ozone chemistry in western U.S. wildfire plumes
190
Citations
85
References
2021
Year
Wildfires are a substantial but poorly quantified source of tropospheric ozone (O<sub>3</sub>). Here, to investigate the highly variable O<sub>3</sub> chemistry in wildfire plumes, we exploit the in situ chemical characterization of western wildfires during the FIREX-AQ flight campaign and show that O<sub>3</sub> production can be predicted as a function of experimentally constrained OH exposure, volatile organic compound (VOC) reactivity, and the fate of peroxy radicals. The O<sub>3</sub> chemistry exhibits rapid transition in chemical regimes. Within a few daylight hours, the O<sub>3</sub> formation substantially slows and is largely limited by the abundance of nitrogen oxides (NO<i><sub>x</sub></i>). This finding supports previous observations that O<sub>3</sub> formation is enhanced when VOC-rich wildfire smoke mixes into NO<i><sub>x</sub></i>-rich urban plumes, thereby deteriorating urban air quality. Last, we relate O<sub>3</sub> chemistry to the underlying fire characteristics, enabling a more accurate representation of wildfire chemistry in atmospheric models that are used to study air quality and predict climate.
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