EGU26-15231, updated on 14 Mar 2026
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15231
EGU General Assembly 2026
© Author(s) 2026. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Poster | Tuesday, 05 May, 10:45–12:30 (CEST), Display time Tuesday, 05 May, 08:30–12:30
 
Hall X5, X5.110
Observed and simulated VOC speciation and OH reactivity across diverse chemical environments during the 2024 ASIA‑AQ campaign
Eric C. Apel1, Behrooz Roozitalab1, Rebecca Hornbrook1, Alan Hills1, Cho Changmin1, Louisa Emmons1, Ben Gaubert1, Daun Jeong2, Barbara Barletta4, Duseong Jo3, Donald Blake4, Nicola Blake4, Simone Meinardi4, Isobel Simpson4, and James Crawford5
Eric C. Apel et al.
  • 1National Center for Atmospheric Research, Atmospheric Chemistry Division, Boulder, CO, United States of America (apel@ucar.edu)
  • 2NOAA Chenical Sciences Laboratory, Boulder, CO, United States of America
  • 3Seoul National University, Seoul, South Korea
  • 4University of California, Irvine, CA, United States of America
  • 5NASA Langley Research Center, Langley, VA, United States of America

Quantifying the abundance of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and accurate representation of their oxidative processing in air quality models are essential for effective air quality management. The NASA ASIA-AQ (Airborne and Satellite Investigation of Asian Air Quality) campaign, conducted in February–March 2024, represents a collaborative international effort to investigate the drivers of air pollution—both local and transported—across four key regions: South Korea, Philippines, Taiwan, and Thailand. As part of this effort, more than 100 C1–C10 VOCs were measured using a suit of state-of-the-art in-situ instruments such as the NSF NCAR Trace Organic Gas Analyzer equipped with a high-resolution time-of-flight mass spectrometer (TOGA-TOF) and the UC Irvine Whole Air Sampler (WAS), all on-board the NASA DC-8 aircraft during its final mission. Here, we present the measured VOC speciated abundance and OH reactivity (OHR) in these four regions. Thailand, largely affected by regional biomass burning emissions during ASIA-AQ, had the highest VOC loading of all the sampled regions and non-methane VOCs (NMVOCs) contributed to approximately half of its total OHR. We complement the OH reactivity analysis with F0AM box modeling simulations to discuss the contribution of unmeasured species. Our results suggest that non-measured NMVOCs contribute up to 40% of OHR. Furthermore, we compare the OHR calculated results against the MUSICAv0 (Multi-Scale Infrastructure for Chemistry and Aerosols version 0) modeling results. Preliminary results suggest that MUSICAv0 broadly captured the total NMVOC OH reactivity but with differences noted, and that significant model/measurement discrepancies were found for specific compounds and compound classes in some regions. We further expand this analysis and quantify the sensitivity of the modeling results to the chemical mechanism complexity used in the simulations.

How to cite: Apel, E. C., Roozitalab, B., Hornbrook, R., Hills, A., Changmin, C., Emmons, L., Gaubert, B., Jeong, D., Barletta, B., Jo, D., Blake, D., Blake, N., Meinardi, S., Simpson, I., and Crawford, J.: Observed and simulated VOC speciation and OH reactivity across diverse chemical environments during the 2024 ASIA‑AQ campaign, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15231, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15231, 2026.