Improved estimates of smoke exposure during Australia fire seasons: importance of quantifying plume injection heights

Feng, Xu, Mickley, Loretta J., Bell, Michelle L., Liu, Tianjia, Fisher, Jenny A., and Val Martin, Maria (2024) Improved estimates of smoke exposure during Australia fire seasons: importance of quantifying plume injection heights. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 24 (5). pp. 2985-3007.

[img]
Preview
PDF (Published Version) - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.

Download (5MB) | Preview
View at Publisher Website: https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-24-2985-2024
 
6
1


Abstract

Wildfires can have a significant impact on air quality in Australia during severe burning seasons, but incomplete knowledge of the injection heights of smoke plumes poses a challenge for quantifying smoke exposure. In this study, we use two approaches to quantify the fractions of fire emissions injected above the planetary boundary layer (PBL), and we further investigate the impact of plume injection fractions on daily mean surface concentrations of fine particulate matter (PM<inf>2.5</inf>) from wildfire smoke in key cities over northern and southeastern Australia from 2009 to 2020. For the first method, we rely on climatological, monthly mean vertical profiles of smoke emissions from the Integrated Monitoring and Modelling System for wildland fires (IS4FIRES) together with assimilated PBL heights from NASA Modern-Era Retrospective Analysis for Research and Application (MERRA) version 2. For the second method, we develop a novel approach based on the Multi-angle Imaging SpectroRadiometer (MISR) observations and a random forest, machine learning model that allows us to directly predict the daily plume injection fractions above the PBL in each grid cell. We apply the resulting plume injection fractions quantified by the two methods to smoke PM<inf>2.5</inf> concentrations simulated by the Stochastic Time-Inverted Lagrangian Transport (STILT) model in target cities. We find that characterization of the plume injection heights greatly affects estimates of surface daily smoke PM<inf>2.5</inf>, especially during severe wildfire seasons, when intense heat from fires can loft smoke high in the troposphere. However, using climatological injection profiles cannot capture well the spatiotemporal variability in plume injection fractions, resulting in a 63% underestimation of daily fire emission fluxes injected above the PBL in comparison with those fluxes derived from MISR injection fractions. Our random forest model successfully reproduces the daily injected fire emission fluxes against MISR observations (R2Combining double low line0.88, normalized mean biasCombining double low line10%) and predicts that 27% and 45% of total fire emissions rise above the PBL in northern and southeastern Australia, respectively, from 2009 to 2020. Using the plume behavior predicted by the random forest method also leads to better model agreement with observed surface PM<inf>2.5</inf> in several key cities near the wildfire source regions, with smoke PM<inf>2.5</inf> accounting for 5%-52% of total PM<inf>2.5</inf> during fire seasons from 2009 to 2020.

Item ID: 86866
Item Type: Article (Research - C1)
ISSN: 1680-7324
Copyright Information: © Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Date Deposited: 10 Sep 2025 01:58
FoR Codes: 37 EARTH SCIENCES > 3701 Atmospheric sciences > 370102 Air pollution processes and air quality measurement @ 100%
SEO Codes: 19 ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY, CLIMATE CHANGE AND NATURAL HAZARDS > 1904 Natural hazards > 190401 Climatological hazards (e.g. extreme temperatures, drought and wildfires) @ 100%
Downloads: Total: 1
Last 12 Months: 1
More Statistics

Actions (Repository Staff Only)

Item Control Page Item Control Page