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- 2011 Annual Meeting
- Environmental Division
- Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics I
- (8c) Investigating Atmospheric Inorganic Aerosol Sensitivity Relationships Through Thermodynamics and Population Dynamics
The regional Community Multiscale Air Quality model is used to investigate regional-scale scientific questions and to quantify emissions controls necessary to attain air quality standards. Within it, condensation and evaporation of inorganic gaseous species are modeled by thermodynamic equilibrium with ISORROPIA (Nenes et al, 1998; Fountoukis and Nenes, 2007), and aerosol population dynamics are quantified by a three-moment scheme (Whitby et al., 1991; Whitby and McMurry, 1997; Binkowski and Roselle, 2003). In this work, the recently developed adjoint of these aerosol processes is employed to elucidate sensitivity relationships of inorganic aerosol populations to concentrations of aerosol species and precursor gases. In particular, this work focuses on the ammonium-nitrate-sulfate-sodium-chloride aerosol system. Finally, sensitivities are determined for atmospheric conditions commensurate with summer in the northeastern United States.