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- Title
NHM-Chem, the Japan Meteorological Agency's regional meteorology - chemistry model (v1.0): model description and aerosol representations.
- Authors
Mizuo Kajino; Makoto Deushi; Tsuyoshi Thomas Sekiyama; Naga Oshima; Keiya Yumimoto; Taichu Yasumichi Tanaka; Joseph Ching; Akihiro Hashimoto; Tetsuya Yamamoto; Masaaki Ikegami; Akane Kamada; Makoto Miyashita; Yayoi Inomata; Shin-ichiro Shima; Kouji Adachi; Yuji Zaizen; Yasuhito Igarashi; Hiromasa Ueda; Takashi Maki; Masao Mikami
- Abstract
A regional-scale meteorology - chemistry model (NHM-Chem v1.0) has been developed. Three options for aerosol representations are currently available: the 5-category non-equilibrium (Aitken, soot-free accumulation, accumulation internally mixed with soot, dust, and sea-salt), 3-category non-equilibrium (Aitken, accumulation, and coarse), and bulk equilibrium (submicron, dust, and sea-salt) methods. These three methods are suitable for the predictions of regional climate, air quality, and operational forecasts, respectively. The total CPU times of the 5-category and 3-category methods were 91 % and 44 % greater than that of the bulk method, respectively. The bulk equilibrium method was shown to be eligible for operational forecast purposes, namely, the surface mass concentrations of air pollutants such as O3, mineral dust, and PM2.5. The 3-category method was shown to be eligible for air quality simulations, namely, mass concentrations and depositions. However, the internal mixture assumption of soot/soot-free and dust/sea-salt particles in the 3-category method resulted in significant differences in the size distribution and hygroscopicity of the particles. Even though the 3-category method was not designed to simulate aerosol-cloud-radiation interaction processes, its performance in terms of bulk properties, such as aerosol optical thickness (AOT) and cloud condensation nuclei (CCN), was acceptable. However, some specific parameters exhibited significant differences or systematic errors. The unrealistic dust/sea-salt complete mixture of the 3-category method induced significant errors in the prediction of mineral dust containing CCN. The overestimation of soot hygroscopicity by the 3-category method induced errors in BC-containing CCN, BC deposition, and absorbing AOT (AAOT). The difference in AAOT was less pronounced because the overestimation of the absorption enhancement was compensated by the overestimation of hygroscopic growth and the consequent loss due to in-cloud scavenging.
- Subjects
ATMOSPHERIC chemistry; METEOROLOGY; ATMOSPHERIC aerosols
- Publication
Geoscientific Model Development Discussions, 2018, p1
- ISSN
1991-9611
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.5194/gmd-2018-128