Spatially resolved photochemistry impacts emissions estimates in fresh
wildfire plumes
Abstract
Wildfire emissions affect downwind air quality and human health.
Predictions of these impacts using models are limited by uncertainties
in emissions and chemical evolution of smoke plumes. Using
high-time-resolution aircraft measurements, we illustrate spatial
variations that can exist horizontally and vertically within a plume due
to differences in the photochemical environment. Dilution-corrected
mixing ratio gradients were observed for reactive compounds and their
oxidation products, such as nitrous acid, catechol, and ozone, likely
due to faster photochemistry in optically-thinner plume edges relative
to darker plume cores. Mixing ratio gradients in midday plumes, driven
by jHONO gradients, are often steepest in the
freshest transects, and become flatter with chemical aging. Gradients in
plumes emitted close to sunset are characterized by titration of
O3 in the plume and little to no gradient formation. We
show how gradients can lead to underestimated emission ratios for
reactive compounds and overestimated emission ratios for oxidation
products.