Civil and Environmental Engineering Publications
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Browsing Civil and Environmental Engineering Publications by Author "Allen, Hannah M."
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Item FORest Canopy Atmosphere Transfer (FORCAsT) 2.0: model updates and evaluation with observations at a mixed forest site(European Geosciences Union, 2021) Wei, Dandan; Alwe, Hariprasad D.; Millet, Dylan B.; Bottorff, Brandon; Lew, Michelle; Stevens, Philip S.; Shutter, Joshua D.; Cox, Joshua L.; Keutsch, Frank N.; Shi, Qianwen; Kavassalis, Sarah C.; Murphy, Jennifer G.; Vasquez, Krystal T.; Allen, Hannah M.; Praske, Eric; Crounse, John D.; Wennberg, Paul O.; Shepson, Paul B.; Bui, Alexander A.T.; Wallace, Henry W.; Griffin, Robert J.; May, Nathaniel W.; Connor, Megan; Slade, Jonathan H.; Pratt, Kerri A.; Wood, Ezra C.; Rollings, Mathew; Deming, Benjamin L.; Anderson, Daniel C.; Steiner, Allison L.The FORCAsT (FORest Canopy Atmosphere Transfer) model version 1.0 is updated to FORCAsT 2.0 by implementing five major changes, including (1) a change to the operator splitting, separating chemistry from emission and dry deposition, which reduces the run time of the gas-phase chemistry by 70 % and produces a more realistic in-canopy profile for isoprene; (2) a modification of the eddy diffusivity parameterization to produce greater and more realistic vertical mixing in the boundary layer, which ameliorates the unrealistic simulated end-of-day peaks in isoprene under well-mixed conditions and improves daytime air temperature; (3) updates to dry deposition velocities with available measurements; (4) implementation of the Reduced Caltech Isoprene Mechanism (RCIM) to reflect the current knowledge of isoprene oxidation; and (5) extension of the aerosol module to include isoprene-derived secondary organic aerosol (iSOA) formation. Along with the operator splitting, modified vertical mixing, and dry deposition, RCIM improves the estimation of first-generation isoprene oxidation products (methyl vinyl ketone and methacrolein) and some second-generation products (such as isoprene epoxydiols). Inclusion of isoprene in the aerosol module in FORCAsT 2.0 leads to a 7 % mass yield of iSOA. The most important iSOA precursors are IEPOX and tetrafunctionals, which together account for >86 % of total iSOA. The iSOA formed from organic nitrates is more important in the canopy, accounting for 11 % of the total iSOA. The tetrafunctionals compose up to 23 % of the total iSOA formation, highlighting the importance of the fate (i.e., dry deposition and gas-phase chemistry) of later-generation isoprene oxidation products in estimating iSOA formation.