Performance of European chemistry transport models as function of horizontal resolution
Air pollution causes adverse effects on human health as well as ecosystems and crop yield
and also has an impact on climate change trough short-lived climate forcers. To design mitigation
strategies for air pollution, 3D Chemistry Transport Models (CTMs) have been developed to support
the decision process. Increases in model resolution may provide more accurate and detailed
information, but will cubically increase computational costs and pose additional challenges concerning
high resolution input data. The motivation for the present study was therefore to explore the impact of
using finer horizontal grid resolution for policy support applications of the European Monitoring and
Evaluation Programme (EMEP) model within the Long Range Transboundary Air Pollution (LRTAP)
convention. The goal was to determine the "optimum resolution" at which additional computational
efforts do not provide increased model performance using presently available input data. Five regional
CTMs performed four runs for 2009 over Europe at different horizontal resolutions. The models'
responses to an increase in resolution are broadly consistent for all models. The largest response was
found for NO2 followed by PM10 and O3. Model resolution does not impact model performance for
rural background conditions. However, increasing model resolution improves the model performance
at stations in and near large conglomerations. The statistical evaluation showed that the increased
resolution better reproduces the spatial gradients in pollution regimes, but does not help to improve
significantly the model performance for reproducing observed temporal variability. This study clearly
shows that increasing model resolution is advantageous, and that leaving a resolution of 50 km in
favour of a resolution between 10 and 20 km is practical and worthwhile. As about 70% of the model
response to grid resolution is determined by the difference in the spatial emission distribution,
improved emission allocation procedures at high spatial and temporal resolution are a crucial factor
for further model resolution improvements.
SCHAAP Martijn;
CUVELIER Cornelis;
HENDRIKS Carlijn;
BESSAGNET B.;
BALDASANO Jose;
COLETTE Augustin;
THUNIS Philippe;
KARAM Diana;
FAGERLI H.;
GRAFF A.;
KRANENBURG Richard;
NYIRI Agnes;
PAY Maria-Teresa;
ROUIL L.;
SCHULZ Michael;
SIMPSON David;
STERN R.;
TERRENOIRE Etienne;
WIND P.;
2015-04-29
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
JRC92130
1352-2310,
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.atmosenv.2015.04.003,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC92130,
10.1016/j.atmosenv.2015.04.003,
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