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Get Free AccessAirborne trace gas measurements from Transport and Chemical Evolution over the Pacific (TRACE‐P), Pacific Exploratory Mission (PEM)‐Tropics B, and Intercontinental Chemical Transport Experiment‐North America (INTEX‐NA) experiments are analyzed to examine the major source factors contributing to the observed variabilities of oxygenated volatile organic compounds and cyanides. The positive matrix factorization method is applied to coincident measurements of 11 chemicals including CH 3 OH, CH 3 COCH 3 , CH 3 CHO, C 2 H 2 , C 2 H 6 , i‐C 5 H 12 , CO, CH 3 Cl, and CHBr 3 . Measurements of HCN and CH 3 CN are available for TRACE‐P and INTEX‐NA. We identify major source contributions from the terrestrial biosphere, biomass burning, industry/urban regions, and oceans. Spatial and back trajectory characteristics of these factors are examined. On the basis of TRACE‐P and PEM‐Tropics B data, we find a factor that explains 80–88% of the CH 3 OH variability, 20–40% of CH 3 COCH 3 , 7–35% of CH 3 CHO, and 41% of HCN, most likely representing the emissions from terrestrial biosphere. Our analysis suggested that biogenic emissions of HCN may be significant. Cyanogenesis in plants is likely a major emission process for HCN, which was not fully accounted for previously. Larger contributions than previous global estimations to CH 3 COCH 3 and CH 3 CHO by biomass burning and industry/urban sources likely reflect significant secondary production from volatile organic compound oxidation. No evidence was found for large emissions of CH 3 COCH 3 from the ocean. The oceanic CH 3 CHO contribution implies large regional variations.
Changsub Shim, Yuhang Wang, H. B. Singh, Donald R Blake, Alex Guenther (2007). Source characteristics of oxygenated volatile organic compounds and hydrogen cyanide. , 112(D10), DOI: https://doi.org/10.1029/2006jd007543.
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Type
Article
Year
2007
Authors
5
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
en
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1029/2006jd007543
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