sp3c00203_si_001.pdf (1.61 MB)
Sources of Formaldehyde in U.S. Oil and Gas Production Regions
journal contribution
posted on 2023-11-14, 03:05 authored by Barbara Dix, Meng Li, Esther Roosenbrand, Colby Francoeur, Steven S. Brown, Jessica B. Gilman, Thomas F. Hanisco, Frank Keutsch, Abigail Koss, Brian M. Lerner, Jeff Peischl, James M. Roberts, Thomas B. Ryerson, Jason M. St. Clair, Patrick R. Veres, Carsten Warneke, Robert J. Wild, Glenn M. Wolfe, Bin Yuan, J. Pepijn Veefkind, Pieternel F. Levelt, Brian C. McDonald, Joost de GouwWe
analyzed observational and model data to study the sources of
formaldehyde over oil and gas production regions and to investigate
how these observations may be used to constrain oil and gas volatile
organic compound (VOC) emissions. The analysis of aircraft and satellite
data consistently found that formaldehyde over oil and gas production
regions during spring and summer is mostly formed by the photooxidation
of precursor VOCs. Formaldehyde columns over the Permian Basin, one
of the largest oil- and gas-producing regions in the United States,
are correlated with the production locations. Formaldehyde simulations
by the atmospheric chemistry and transport model WRF-Chem, which included
oil and gas NOx and VOC emissions from
the fuel-based oil and gas inventory, were in very good agreement
with TROPOMI satellite measurements. Sensitivity studies illustrated
that VOCs released from oil and gas activities are important precursors
to formaldehyde, but other sources of VOCs contribute as well and
that the formation of secondary formaldehyde is highly sensitive to
NOx. We also investigated the ability
of the chemical mechanism used in WRF-Chem to represent formaldehyde
formation from oil and gas hydrocarbons by comparing against the Master
Chemical Mechanism. Further, our work provides estimates of primary
formaldehyde emissions from oil and gas production activities, with
per basin averages ranging from 0.07 to 2.2 kg h–1 in 2018. A separate estimate for natural gas flaring found that
flaring emissions could contribute 5 to 12% to the total primary formaldehyde
emissions for the Permian Basin in 2018.
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