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Enhanced Capabilities of TROPOMI NO2: Estimating NOX from North American Cities and Power Plants.

Daniel L GoldbergZifeng LuDavid G StreetsBenjamin de FoyDebora GriffinChris A McLindenLok N LamsalNickolay A KrotkovHenk Eskes
Published in: Environmental science & technology (2019)
The TROPOspheric Monitoring Instrument (TROPOMI) is used to derive top-down NOX emissions for two large power plants and three megacities in North America. We first re-process the vertical column NO2 with an improved air mass factor to correct for a known systematic low bias in the operational retrieval near urban centers. For the two power plants, top-down NOX emissions agree to within 10% of the emissions reported by the power plants. We then derive top-down NOX emissions rates for New York City, Chicago, and Toronto, and compare them to projected bottom-up emissions inventories. In this analysis of 2018 NOX emissions, we find a +22% overestimate for New York City, a -21% underestimate in Toronto, and good agreement in Chicago in the projected bottom-up inventories when compared to the top-down emissions. Top-down NOX emissions also capture intraseasonal variability, such as the weekday versus weekend effect (emissions are +45% larger on weekdays versus weekends in Chicago). Finally, we demonstrate the enhanced capabilities of TROPOMI, which allow us to derive a NOX emissions rate for Chicago using a single overpass on July 7, 2018. The large signal-to-noise ratio of TROPOMI is well-suited for estimating NOX emissions from relatively small sources and for sub-seasonal timeframes.
Keyphrases
  • municipal solid waste
  • life cycle
  • reactive oxygen species
  • risk assessment
  • drinking water
  • high resolution
  • simultaneous determination
  • anaerobic digestion