United States Environmental Protection Agency Atmospheric Research and Exposure Assessment Laboratory Research Triangle Park, NC 27711 Research and Development EPA/600/SR-93/075 June 1993 Project Summary Relationships Between Ozone Precursor Levels and Response to Emissions Reductions: Analysis of Regional Oxidant Model Results for the Northeastern United States Jana B. Milford, Dongfen Gao, and Antigoni Zafirakou A detailed analysis of results from the Regional Ozone Modeling for North- east Transport (ROMNET) study has been conducted to examine the condi- tions under which alternative control strategies were predicted to be effec- tive in improving air quality. The ROMNET study had predicted that for most of the northeastern United States, reducing nitrogen oxides (NOx) emis- sions by about 60% would be more effective in reducing ozone (O3) than reducing anthropogenic reactive or- ganic gas (ROG) emissions by approxi- mately the same proportion. However, for the New York City and Baltimore- Washington areas, ROG controls were predicted to be highly effective and NOx controls to be counterproductive! ROMNET results for cases in which the reactivity of ROG emissions was re- duced were similar to those for cases in which the mass of ROG emissions was reduced. Plots of O3 versus the concurrent NO concentration in each model grid cefl indicated that O3 in- creased with NOy concentrations up to 10-15 ppb; and either increased or decreased with higher NO depending on the associated ROG levels. The analysis also showed that reducing NOx emissions by about 60% was uniformly beneficial for grid cells with NO con- centrations less than about 25 ppb, but counterproductive for some grid cells with NOy above 25 ppb. Ozone was relatively insensitive to reductions in ROG emissions in grid cells with NO concentrations below 5-10 ppb. We recommend further investigation of the idea that NOy concentrations could serve as an indicator of the likely sen- sitivity of O3 to ROG or NOx controls, if NOy was monitored along with peak ozone during photochemical air pollu- tion episodes. This Project Summary was developed by EPA's Atmospheric Research and Exposure Assessment Laboratory, Re- search Triangle Park, NC, to announce key findings of the research report that is fully documented in a separate re- port of the same title (see Project Re- port ordering information at back). Introduction The success of efforts to reduce sum- mertime concentrations of ozone through- out the northeastern United States de- pends on our understanding of the chem- istry involved in ozone formation in this region. Three questions that are currently the subject of controversy illustrate the importance of our ability to describe the chemistry that is occurring: (1) What is the relative contribution to ozone formation of biogenic versus Printed on Recycled Paper ------- anthropogenic emissions of reactive organic gases (ROG)? (2) Where would reductions in emissions of nitrogen oxides (NOx) help reduce ozone, and where would they be counterproductive? (3) What benefits could be gained through control strategies such as substitut- ing methanol-based fuel for gasoline, which lower the reactivity of ROG emissions, rather than cutting the overall mass of emissions? For the Northeast, the questions listed above have been addressed in the Re- gional Oxidant Modeling for Northeast Transport (ROMNET) study conducted by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and state and local agencies within the region. The study used EPA's three-di- mensional, regional scale photochemical grid model, the Regional Oxidant Model (ROM), to simulate the air quality impacts of a variety of control strategies for ROG and/or NOx emissions. This study extends the analysis of the ROMNET results, fo- cussing on understanding the chemical interactions (as predicted by ROM) that underlie the impact of alternative control measures on air quality. Used in predicting how air quality will respond to emissions reductions, the role of a photochemical air quality model is to integrate descriptions of the fundamental physical and chemical processes that gov- ern ozone formation, destruction, and transport. The physicochemical system that produces ozone on regional and urban scales is extremely complex, and many features of the system are difficult, if not impossible, to elucidate empirically. De- spite well recognized limitations (notably, inadequate evaluation by comparison with observations, but also including the ex- pense and time required to apply them), photochemical air quality models repre- sent the best means currently available to predict how air quality might respond to altered emissions. Because of the limitations of the mod- els, however, considerable interest exists in finding observable "indicators" of how real air masses are likely to respond to emissions controls (e.g., of NOx versus ROG-based strategies). Examining model predictions of the associations between chemical species, and the chemical con- ditions under which controls are predicted to be more or less effective, can help to identify possible indicators. Once key as- sociations have been ferreted out from model results, the next step is to look for them in field observations. The study reported here has examined the predicted distributions and interactions of chemical species in the ROM simula- tions, which underlie predictions of how concentrations of ozone and other sec- ondary species might respond to controls. The analysis has explored relationships between chemical species, and how pre- dicted concentrations of ROG classes, radicals, NOx, NO , etc., differ from one location to another,vand change from simu- lations with base case emissions to simu- lations of controlled emissions levels. The associations between chemical species seen in the model outputs result from the modeled interactions of chemical reactions, transport processes, emissions distribu- tions, etc., and therefore are not neces- sarily apparent in the input data or in theoretical descriptions of individual pro- cesses. Some of the associations pre- dicted by the model should be observ- able, and some suggest new strategies for predicting the effect of controls, evalu- ating models, and monitoring the progress of control efforts. Discussion and Conclusions Summary A key assumption underlying this study is that photochemical air quality models such as ROM, despite their limitations, are useful tools for integrating existing un- derstanding of the complex array of physi- cal and chemical processes that act to- gether to form, transport and destroy sec- ondary pollutants. In particular, models are a primary tool for investigating how sec- ondary pollutants might respond to altered precursor emissions rates. We thus hoped that detailed examination of ROM results showing the chemical conditions under which alternative control strategies were predicted to be effective might suggest ways in which air quality monitoring pro- grams could be improved, to better assist in evaluating models and ultimately in pre- dicting the effects of control strategies. Within the ROMNET simulation period of July 2-17, 1988, July 8 was singled out as the focus of this analysis, as repre- sentative of a high ozone day. With me- teorological conditions for the July 1988 episode but with emissions projected to the year 2005, predicted ozone concen- trations in the ROMNET domain on July 8 peaked at around 250 ppb, in New York City. To reduce ozone concentrations, the ROMNET study predicted that reducing NOx emissions by about 60% would be more effective, for most of the model do- main, than reducing anthropogenic ROG emissions by approximately the same pro- portion. Combining the ROG and NOx re- ductions was predicted to yield similar re- ductions in ozone to those achieved with NOx controls alone. However, countervailing results were predicted for portions of the New York City and Baltimore-Washington metropolitan areas, where peak ozone con- centrations on July 8 were higher under the NOx control strategy than in the base case. The response of PAN concentrations to the ROG or NOx control strategies was predicted to be similar to that for ozone. NOx controls were predicted to be uni- formly most effective in reducing HNO3; ROG controls in reducing H2O2 and form- aldehyde. Two additional ROMNET scenarios that we examined were designed to predict the effect of measures that reduce the reactivity of volatile organic compound emissions without substantial reductions in the mass of emissions. Results for ozone in the CS20 scenario, in which the reactivity adjustment was the only change from the 2005 base case, were similar to those of CS12, with substantial reductions limited to the New York City area. Al- though unweighted ROG concentrations in urban areas were 30 to 40% higher in CS20 than in CS12, reactivity weighted ROG concentrations in CS20 generally fell within 10 to 20% of CS12 levels. Because predicted responses in New York City were so different from those occurring elsewhere, time series of pre- dicted concentrations were examined along an air mass trajectory ending in the core of the city at 4 p.m. on July 8. The New York City core was characterized by ex- tremely high ROG and NO concentrations, relative to the rest of they model domain. Based on the time series of precursor and radical concentrations along the New York City trajectory, one factor in the sharp drop in ozone concentrations in the area that results from ROG controls appears to be an increase in the lifetime of NOx. With reduced ROG emissions, OH concentra- tions are also reduced, and consequently the conversion of NOx to inactive forms of NOy is slowed. ROG controls thus appear to extend the period during which ozone levels are suppressed by high NOx emis- sions. Preliminary analysis of the ROMNET results looked at associations of ozone levels with concentrations of NOx, NO , ROG and ROG/NOx in the same grid cell. Consistent with the findings of Sillman et al. (1990), the association of ozone with NOy showed the clearest trends with the least scatter, supporting its use as a refer- ence variable. As discussed by Sillman et al., NO has a similar lifetime to that of ozone, vand reflects time-integrated NOx emissions received into an air mass. ------- Scatter plots of 4 p.m. ozone versus 4 p.m. NO concentrations in each grid cell for the ROMNET 2005 base case and for the ROG (CS12) and reduced reactiv- ity (CS20) control cases are consistent in indicating that ozone increases with NO concentrations up to 10 - 15 ppb; then increases or decreases with NO depend- ing on the associated ROG levels. Scatter plots of the change in ozone from the base case to the NOx control case (CS11) and from CS12 to the combined control case (CS10) indicate that NOx controls are uniformly beneficial for grid cells with 4 p.m. NO concentrations less than about 25 ppb. The NOx control scenarios were predicted to be counterproductive for some grid cells with NO concentrations above that level. Ozone concentrations were rela- tively insensitive to reductions in ROG emissions in grid cells with NO concen- trations below 5 to 10 ppb. The associa- tions of PAN concentrations and of the response to NOx controls with NO were qualitatively similar to those found for ozone. Discussion Results from the ROMNET study for the association of ozone with NOy, and specifically the threshold NO concventra- tions below which NOx controls are uni- formly beneficial, appear to be consistent with results from several other modeling studies (Sillman et al., 1990; Sadeghi et al., 1992; McKeen et ai, 1991; Milford et al., 1992). The fact that this association is so consistent across modeling studies sug- gests that NOy measurements may be a useful empirical indicator for the sensitiv- ity of ozone to emissions. It is well known that the balance be- tween ROG and NOx levels controls the sensitivity of ozone to precursor emissions reductions, with ROG/NOx ratios used to characterize this balance. Problems with the use of ROG/NOx ratios as empirical indicators of ozone sensitivity have been noted in Section 2.2 of the full report. Reflecting those problems, preliminary analysis of the ROMNET results showed that the response of ozone to ROG or NOx controls was more consistently re- lated to simultaneous NO concentrations than to ROG/NOx ratios. v As a measured cumulative NOx emis- sions, NO may serve as an adequate indi- cator of whether an air mass is ROG or NOx-limited in part because effective ROG levels are relatively uniform (Chameides et al., 1992). Figure 34 in the full report was notable in supporting this argument, showing the association of propylene- equivalent ROG concentrations with unweighted ROG in the range that en- compasses the concentrations in most of the urban grid cells in the ROMNET do- main, except those in the New York City area. No correlation is apparent between these two measures of ROG levels. In most urban grid cells outside of New York City, even though unweighted ROG con- centrations were relatively high, Propy- Equiv ROG concentrations were close to the domain average. Gradients of NO concentrations are generally much sharper than those of Propy-Equiv ROG. Our analysis suggests the possibility that measured NOy concentrations could be used as indicators of the photochemical sensitivity of air at times of high ozone and as a critical test of model perfor- mance. Establishing a network of NO monitors would permit evaluation of mod- els such as ROM against a variable that is directly related to the simulated effec- tiveness of ROG versus NO control strategies, thus increasing confidence in the use of the models. However, before such a network could be created, several issues need to be addressed. Although measurement techniques for total NO have performed well in research applications (Fehsenfeld et al., 1987; NRC, 1991), consideration should be given to how readily these techniques could be adapted for more widespread use. An- other critical issue is monitor siting and sample timing. Use of NO measurements as indicators of ozone sensitivity would require that monitoring locations be re- moved from direct emissions of NOx, and that sampling coincide with peak ozone concentrations. A final question is the correspondence between modeled and measured NO . The CBIV mechanism (Geryetal., 1988; V1989) included in ROM uses a condensed treat- ment of organic nitrate species, and ne- glects gas to aerosol conversions, such as formation of ammonium nitrate from nitric acid. The fraction of aerosol nitrate recovered in NO measurements is un- known. Moreover, there is some "lost" ni- trogen in the CBIV mechanism, in that nitrogen-containing products of some re- actions are not tracked. According to Trainer et al. (1991), during the summer of 1986, NO, NO2, HNO3 and PAN ac- counted for 85% or more of the NO mea- sured at their field site in rural Pennsylva- nia. Thus, for the rural to urban conditions found in the northeastern U.S., discrepan- cies between measured and modeled NO are probably not large. Nevertheless, the sources of potential discrepancies war- rant further study. Recommendations Further investigation is warranted of the idea that NO concentrations could serve as an empirical indicator of the likely sen- sitivity of ozone to ROG or NOx con- trols, if monitored along with peak ozone during photochemical air pollution epi- sodes. Assessment of the adaptability of NOy measurement techniques for routine use in urban areas is needed, along with detailed evaluation of errors introduced by the simplified treatment of reactive NO species in ROM and other photochemical air pollution models. To recommend that the Regional Oxi- dant Model should be evaluated more ex- tensively, especially with regard to its per- formance for ozone precursors, is ap- proaching a cliche. However, the depen- dence of predicted ROG or NOx control effectiveness on NO levels displayed by the ROM results underscores the impor- tance of this recommendation. To empha- size the point, the ability of the model to predict responses to alternative control strategies is tied to its ability to simulate grid cell averaged NO levels. With re- spect to ROG levels, the lack of spatial correlation between ROG and Propy-Equiv ROG concentrations suggests the need for speciated ROG measurements, rather than measurements of total ROG. The model results also point to the importance of measuring concentrations of carbonyl species. Finally, a targetted field experiment would be of interest to verify the ROMNET result that in the New York City area, in association with peak ozone concentra- tions, very high ratios of NOx to NO persist throughout the day. If observed, unusually large NOx fractions would support the pre- diction that ROG emissions reductions will be highly effective for the New York City area. References Chameides, W.L., F. Fehsenfeld, M.O. Rogers, C. Cardelino, J. Martinez, D. Parrish, W. Lonneman, D.R. Lawson, R.A. Rasmussen, P. Zimmerman, J. Greenberg, P. Middleton, and T. Wang. Ozone precursor relationships in the ambient atmosphere, J. Geophys. Res. 97, 6037-6055, 1992. Fehsenfeld, F.C., R.R. Dickerson, G. Hubler, W.T. Luke, L.J. Nunnermacker, E.J. Wil- liams, J.M. Roberts, J.G. Calvert, C.M. Curran, A.C. Delany, C.S. Eubank, D.W. Fahey, A. Fried, B.W. Gandrud, A.O. Langford, P.C. Murphy, R.B. Norton, K.E. Pickering, and B.A. Ridley. A ground- *U.S. Government Printing Office: 1993 — 750-071/60257 ------- based intercomparison of NO, NOx, and NO measurement techniques, J. Geophys. Res., 92: 14710-14722, 1987. Gery, M.W., G.Z. Whitten, and J.P. Killus. Development and Testing of the CBM- IV for Urban and Regional Modeling, EPA-600/3-88/012, U.S. Environmen- tal Protection Agency, Research Tri- angle Park, NC, 1988. Gery, M.W., G.Z. Whitten, J.P. Killus, and M.C. Dodge. A photochemical kinet- ics mechanism for urban and regional scale computer models, J. Geophys. Res. 94. 12925-12956, 1989. McKeen, S.A., E.-Y. Hsie, and S.C. Liu. A study of the dependence of rural ozone on ozone precursors in the eastern United States, J. Geophys. Res. 96: 15377-15394, 1991. Milford, J.B., D. Gao, S. Sillman, P. Blossey, and A.G. Russell. NO as an indicator of the sensitivity of ozone to ROG and NOx emissions, paper in preparation, 1992. National Research Council. Rethinking the Ozone Problem in Urban and Re- gional Air Pollution, National Acad- emy Press, Washington DC, 1991. Sadeghi, V.M., L. Bruckman, H.W. Balentine, B.J. Morrison, S. Coerr, and I.H. Billick. Evaluation of the efficacy of NOx controls in ozone nonattainment areas under section 182(f) of the 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments, Paper No. 92-89.03, presented at the 85th Annual Meet- ing of the Air and Waste Manage- ment Association, Kansas City, MO, June 21-26, 1992. Sillman, S., J.A. Logan, and S.C. Wofsy. The sensitivity of ozone to nitrogen oxides and hydrocarbons in regional ozone episodes, J. Geophys. Res. 95: 1837-1851, 1990. Trainer, M., M.P. Buhr, C.M. Curran, F.C. Fehsenfeld, E.Y. Hsie, S.C. Liu, R.B. Norton, D.D. Parrish, E.J. Williams, B.W. Gandrud, B.A. Ridley, J.D. Shetter, E.J. Allwine, and H.H. Westberg. Observations and model- ing of the reactive nitrogen photo- chemistry at a rural site, J. Geophys. Res. 96: 3045-3063, 1991. Jana B. Milford, Dongfen Gao, and Antigoni Zafirakou are with the University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT 06269. Thomas E. Pierce is the EPA Project Officer (see below). The complete report, entitled "Relationships Between Ozone Precursor Levels and Response to Emissions Reductions: Analysis of Regional Oxidant Model Results for the Northeastern United States," (Order No. PB93-186 294/AS; Cost: $27.00, subject to change) will be available only from: National Technical Information Service 5285 Port Royal Road Springfield, VA 22161 Telephone: 703-487-4650 The EPA Project Officer can be contacted at: Atmospheric Research and Exposure Assessment Laboratory U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Research Triangle Park, NC 27711 United States Environmental Protection Agency Center for Environmental Research Information Cincinnati, OH 45268 BULK RATE POSTAGE & FEES PAID EPA PERMIT No. G-35 Official Business Penalty for Private Use $300 EPA/600/SR-93/075 ------- |