Investigating the impact of coupling HARMONIE-WINS50 (cy43) meteorology to LOTOS-EUROS (v2.2.002) on a simulation of NO2 concentrations over the Netherlands

Journal Article (2024)
Author(s)

A. Yarce Botero (TU Delft - Mathematical Physics, TU Delft - Atmospheric Remote Sensing)

Michiel van Weele (Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI))

Arjo Segers (TNO)

AP Siebesma (Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI), TU Delft - Atmospheric Remote Sensing)

Henk Eskes (Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI))

Research Group
Atmospheric Remote Sensing
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-17-3765-2024
More Info
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Publication Year
2024
Language
English
Research Group
Atmospheric Remote Sensing
Issue number
9
Volume number
17
Pages (from-to)
3765–3781
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Abstract

Meteorological fields calculated by numerical weather prediction (NWP) models drive offline chemical transport models (CTMs) to solve the transport, chemical reactions, and atmospheric interaction over the geographical domain of interest. HARMONIE (HIRLAM ALADIN Research on Mesoscale Operational NWP in Euromed) is a state-of-The-Art non-hydrostatic NWP community model used at several European weather agencies to forecast weather at the local and/or regional scale. In this work, the HARMONIE WINS50 (cycle 43 cy43) reanalysis dataset at a resolution of 0.025°ĝ€¯×ĝ€¯0.025° covering an area surrounding the North Sea for the years 2019-2021 was coupled offline to the LOTOS-EUROS (LOng-Term Ozone Simulation-EURopean Operational Smog model, v2.2.002) CTM. The impact of using either meteorological fields from HARMONIE or from ECMWF on LOTOS-EUROS simulations of NO2 has been evaluated against ground-level observations and TROPOMI tropospheric NO2 vertical columns. Furthermore, the difference between crucial meteorological input parameters such as the boundary layer height and the vertical diffusion coefficient between the hydrostatic ECMWF and non-hydrostatic HARMONIE data has been studied, and the vertical profiles of temperature, humidity, and wind are evaluated against meteorological observations at Cabauw in The Netherlands. The results of these first evaluations of the LOTOS-EUROS model performance in both configurations are used to investigate current uncertainties in air quality forecasting in relation to driving meteorological parameters and to assess the potential for improvements in forecasting pollution episodes at high resolutions based on the HARMONIE NWP model.