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J Air Waste Manag Assoc


Title:Development of a database for chemical mechanism assignments for volatile organic emissions
Author(s):Carter WP;
Address:"a College of Engineering Center for Environmental Research and Technology, University of California , Riverside , CA , USA"
Journal Title:J Air Waste Manag Assoc
Year:2015
Volume:65
Issue:10
Page Number:1171 - 1184
DOI: 10.1080/10962247.2015.1013646
ISSN/ISBN:1096-2247 (Print) 1096-2247 (Linking)
Abstract:"The development of a database for making model species assignments when preparing total organic gas (TOG) emissions input for atmospheric models is described. This database currently has assignments of model species for 12 different gas-phase chemical mechanisms for over 1700 chemical compounds and covers over 3000 chemical categories used in five different anthropogenic TOG profile databases or output by two different biogenic emissions models. This involved developing a unified chemical classification system, assigning compounds to mixtures, assigning model species for the mechanisms to the compounds, and making assignments for unknown, unassigned, and nonvolatile mass. The comprehensiveness of the assignments, the contributions of various types of speciation categories to current profile and total emissions data, inconsistencies with existing undocumented model species assignments, and remaining speciation issues and areas of needed work are also discussed. The use of the system to prepare input for SMOKE, the Speciation Tool, and for biogenic models is described in the supplementary materials. The database, associated programs and files, and a users manual are available online at http://www.cert.ucr.edu/~carter/emitdb . IMPLICATIONS: Assigning air quality model species to the hundreds of emitted chemicals is a necessary link between emissions data and modeling effects of emissions on air quality. This is not easy and makes it difficult to implement new and more chemically detailed mechanisms in models. If done incorrectly, it is similar to errors in emissions speciation or the chemical mechanism used. Nevertheless, making such assignments is often an afterthought in chemical mechanism development and emissions processing, and existing assignments are usually undocumented and have errors and inconsistencies. This work is designed to address some of these problems"
Keywords:"Air Pollutants/*analysis *Databases, Factual Models, Theoretical United States Volatile Organic Compounds/*analysis;"
Notes:"MedlineCarter, William P L eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't 2015/10/10 J Air Waste Manag Assoc. 2015 Oct; 65(10):1171-84. doi: 10.1080/10962247.2015.1013646"

 
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