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Key results from the salt lake regional smoke, ozone, and aerosol study (SAMOZA).

Daniel A JaffeMatthew NinnemanLinh NguyenHaebum LeeLu HuDamien T KetchersideLixu JinEmily CopeSeth N LymanColleen JonesTrevor O'NeilMarc L Mansfield
Published in: Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association (1995) (2024)
The Northern Wasatch Front area is one of ~ 50 metropolitan regions in the U.S. that do not meet the 2015 O 3 standard. To better understand the causes of high O 3 days in this region we conducted the Salt Lake regional Smoke, Ozone and Aerosol Study (SAMOZA) in the summer of 2022. The primary goals of SAMOZA were: Measure a suite of VOCs, by Proton Transfer Reaction Mass Spectrometry (PTR-MS) and the 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine (DNPH) cartridge method.Evaluate whether the standard UV O 3 measurements made in SLC show a positive bias during smoke events, as has been suggested in some recent studies.Use the observations to conduct photochemical modeling and statistical/machine learning analyses to understand photochemistry on both smoke-influenced and non-smoke days. Implications: The Northern Wasatch Front area is one of ~50 metropolitan regions in the U.S. that do not meet the 2015 O 3 standard. To better understand the causes of high O 3 days in this region we conducted the Salt Lake regional Smoke, Ozone and Aerosol Study (SAMOZA) in the summer of 2022. A number of policy relevant findings are identified in the manuscript including role of smoke and NOx vs VOC sensitivity.
Keyphrases
  • mass spectrometry
  • machine learning
  • particulate matter
  • public health
  • mental health
  • high resolution
  • ms ms
  • water soluble
  • heat stress