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Nitrogen Deposition: Measurement Techniques and Field Studies AT 621 Special Lecture November 26, 2012 Ashley Evanoski-Cole Atmospheric Nitrogen Pathways May increase with climate change (Civerolo, 2007) Eutrophication Decrease biodiversity Acidification - Cation exchange in soils - Lakes/streams acidification http://nadp.sws.uiuc.edu/lib/brochures/nitrogen.pdf Pathways for Ammonia (NH3) NH3 Sources Particle Formation Chemical Processing 1. Livestock NH3(g) → NH3(aq) 2. Ammonification of Humus NH3(aq) + H+ ↔ NH4+(aq) 3. Emission from Soils 4. Fertilizer 5. Industrial Emissions NH4+(aq) + NO3-(aq) ↔ NH4NO3(aq) Dry or Wet Deposition Transport τ ~ 10 days Dry Deposition Pathways for NOx Chemical Processing (day) NOx Sources 1. Fossil fuel combustion 2. Biomass Burning 3. Soils NO2(g) + OH → HNO3(g) Chemical Processing (night) NO2 + NO3 ↔ N2O5 N2O5(g) H2O(aq) → HNO3(aq) Ozone Formation 4. Lightning Transport (lifetime highly variable) HNO3 dry and wet deposition HNO3 dry and wet deposition Wet Deposition • Particles and gases that deposit to the surface via rain, snow or fog – In cloud nucleation – Particle / gas scavenging How is it measured? • Analyze species in precipitation samples Dry Deposition • Gases and particles that directly transfer to the surface by diffusion (gases and small particles) or gravitational settling (larger particles) How is it measured? • Directly: Measure the vertical flux of species of interest or measuring amount of species collected on a surface, such as on a filter • Indirectly: Flux measurements are derived from measurements of mean concentration or vertical gradients of mean concentrations (this method requires more assumptions) CASTNet site at Penn State University NADP Monitoring Network • National Atmospheric Deposition Program – Started measurements in 1978 measuring only weekly precipitation data in the National Trends Network (NTN). – Now monitoring sites for daily precipitation, mercury in precipitation (wet deposition), atmospheric mercury (dry deposition), and ammonia Weekly precipitation monitoring sites (NTN) CASTNet Monitoring Network • Clean Air Status and Trends Network • Established in 1991 to measure acid deposition • Measure ambient concentrations and dry deposition of SO2, HNO3, (gases) and SO42-, NH4+, NO3-, (particles) • Use indirect method by measuring concentration and estimated deposition velocities H+ NO3- NH3 http://nadp.sws.uiuc.edu/ntn/annualmapsbyyear.aspx Percent Change in N deposition Ammonia Lehmann et al., 2005 Nitrate Inorganic Nitrogen (Ammonium and nitrate) ROMANS Field Campaigns • Rocky Mountain Atmospheric Nitrogen and Sulfur (RoMANS) study • Multi-year study between 20062010 • Collaboration between CSU, CIRA, NPS, many other groups • Main Objectives were to: • Measure N and S deposition • Characterize meteorological conditions associated with high N and S concentrations • Identify source regions and emissions within Colorado and out of state transport Measurements • Gas and Particle Chemistry – 24 hr gaseous species: NH3, HNO3, SO2 – 24 hr Particle Chemistry: Na+, NH4+, K+, Mg2+, Ca2+, Cl-, NO3-, SO42– 15 min. Particle Chemistry: same as above – Weekly PM2.5 water soluble organic nitrogen • Precipitation Chemistry – ions above and organic nitrogen • In RMNP - meteorological measurements from the National Park Service Air Resources Division • In GTNP – we operated three different met. stations [slide from K. Benedict] Brush Loveland RMNP Concentrations Across Colorado Concentration (µmol/m3) 1.0 NH3 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0.02 Concentration (µmol/m3) HNO3 0.06 0.04 0.02 NO3- 0.06 0.05 0.04 0.03 0.02 0.01 12/1/09 11/1/09 10/1/09 9/1/09 8/1/09 7/1/09 6/1/09 5/1/09 4/1/09 3/1/09 2/1/09 0.00 1/1/09 [slide from K. Benedict] 0.04 12/1/08 NH3(g) + HNO3 (g) ⟺ NH4NO3 (p) 0.06 0.00 0.07 Concentration (µmol/m3) f(T, RH) 0.08 0.00 Large differences between sites for gas phase species Concentrations are more similar of aerosol species – often concentrations at RMNP are similar to those on the plains NH4+ 0.10 11/1/08 Seasonal trends Concentration (µmol/m3) 0.12 Winds and Concentrations SO4 1.2 NH4 NO3 Rain Event Wind Direction 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 5/26/09 Concentration 5.0 SO4 5/28/09 NH4 5/29/09 NO3 5/30/09 Rain Event 5/31/09 6/1/09 Wind Direction 4.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 0.0 10/6/09 [slide from K. Benedict] 10/10/09 10/14/09 10/18/09 10/22/09 360 270 180 90 0 -90 -180 -270 -360 Wind Direction (µg/m3) Fall 5/27/09 360 270 180 90 0 -90 -180 -270 -360 6/2/09 Wind Direction Concentration (µg/m3) Spring Critical load describes the point at which a natural system is impacted by air pollution. They can be used to assess ecosystem health, guide resource management decisions, and evaluate the effectiveness of emissions reduction strategies. http://nadp.sws.uiuc.edu/lib/brochures/criticalloads.pdf http://www.nature.nps.gov/air/Studies/criticalloads/criticalLoadExplain.cfm Nitrogen Deposition & Critical Load • All Pathways Annual Deposition: 3.46 kg N·ha-1 Set Critical Load 2008-2009 Critical Load Comparison 2008-2009 Dry NH3 and Wet ON 1.5 1.97 1.37 (Wet deposition of NH4+ + NO3-) • Are dry deposition of NH3 and wet deposition of ON important in other areas? [slide modified from K. Benedict] Dry NO3 Dry 1% Dry NH4 HNO3 2% 5% Dry ON 1% Dry NH3 17% Wet ON 17% Wet NO3 20% Wet NH4 37% Results and Potential Future Research • Results of RMNP study were used to form a nitrogen deposition reduction plan for the state of Colorado In Future Studies: • Determine importance of each contribution to dry and wet deposition in other sites – Grand Teton NP (agricultural emissions to the east) – Theodore Roosevelt NP in North Dakota (oil and gas drilling emissions)