Articles | Volume 19, issue 22
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-19-13809-2019
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-19-13809-2019
Research article
 | 
18 Nov 2019
Research article |  | 18 Nov 2019

Analysis of temporal and spatial variability of atmospheric CO2 concentration within Paris from the GreenLITE laser imaging experiment

Jinghui Lian, François-Marie Bréon, Grégoire Broquet, T. Scott Zaccheo, Jeremy Dobler, Michel Ramonet, Johannes Staufer, Diego Santaren, Irène Xueref-Remy, and Philippe Ciais
Abstract

In 2015, the Greenhouse gas Laser Imaging Tomography Experiment (GreenLITE) measurement system was deployed for a long-duration experiment in the center of Paris, France. The system measures near-surface atmospheric CO2 concentrations integrated along 30 horizontal chords ranging in length from 2.3 to 5.2 km and covering an area of 25 km2 over the complex urban environment. In this study, we use this observing system together with six conventional in situ point measurements and the Weather Research and Forecasting model coupled with Chemistry (WRF-Chem) and two urban canopy schemes (Urban Canopy Model – UCM; Building Effect Parameterization – BEP) at a horizontal resolution of 1 km to analyze the temporal and spatial variations in CO2 concentrations within the city of Paris and its vicinity for the 1-year period spanning December 2015 to November 2016. Such an analysis aims at supporting the development of CO2 atmospheric inversion systems at the city scale. Results show that both urban canopy schemes in the WRF-Chem model are capable of reproducing the seasonal cycle and most of the synoptic variations in the atmospheric CO2 point measurements over the suburban areas as well as the general corresponding spatial differences in CO2 concentration that span the urban area. However, within the city, there are larger discrepancies between the observations and the model results with very distinct features during winter and summer. During winter, the GreenLITE measurements clearly demonstrate that one urban canopy scheme (BEP) provides a much better description of temporal variations and horizontal differences in CO2 concentrations than the other (UCM) does. During summer, much larger CO2 horizontal differences are indicated by the GreenLITE system than both the in situ measurements and the model results, with systematic east–west variations.

Dates
1 Introduction

Urban areas account for almost two-thirds of global energy consumption and more than 70 % of carbon emissions (IEA, 2008). Human activities, such as fossil fuel burning (Duren and Miller, 2012) and cement production (Wang et al., 2012), produce a net increase in atmospheric CO2 concentration within and downwind of the emission sources. Over the years, many instruments have been or will be used to measure the urban atmospheric CO2 concentrations, including (i) ground-based monitoring networks in, e.g., Paris (Xueref-Remy et al., 2018), Indianapolis (Davis et al., 2017), Los Angeles (Feng et al., 2016), Washington, DC (Mueller et al., 2018), Boston (Sargent et al., 2018); (ii) airborne campaigns conducted in, e.g., Colorado (Graven et al., 2009), London (Font et al., 2015); (iii) existing space-based measurements, e.g., GOSAT (Hamazaki et al., 2004) and OCO-2 (Crisp et al., 2008; Crisp, 2015); and (iv) future satellites with imaging capabilities, e.g., OCO-3 (Elderling et al., 2019), GeoCarb (Moore et al., 2018), and CO2M (Buchwitz, 2018). These observations are used or could be used for estimating emissions of CO2 over large cities using atmospheric inverse modeling or to detect emission trends if these data are collected over a sufficiently long period of time. High-accuracy continuous in situ ground-based measurements of CO2 concentrations, using the cavity ring-down spectroscopy (CRDS) technology, have been used in previous urban atmospheric inversion studies for the quantification of CO2 emissions of large cities (Bréon et al., 2015; Staufer et al., 2016; Lauvaux et al., 2016; Feng et al., 2016; Boon et al., 2016; Sargent et al., 2018). However, many in situ stations may be needed to accurately capture the CO2 emission budget of a large city (Wu et al., 2016). Deploying such a network is expensive to install and maintain. The sparseness of CO2 concentration sampling sites limits the ability of inversions to estimate the large spatial and temporal variations in the CO2 emissions within the city, even though high-resolution emission inventories are available (e.g., AIRPARIF, 2013).

New concepts and technologies are desirable for a full sampling of atmospheric CO2 concentrations within a city. These concepts may rely on moderate-precision but low-cost sensors that could be deployed at many sites for a high spatial density sampling (Wu et al., 2016; Arzoumanian et al., 2019). An alternative to in situ point measurements is a remote-sensing system based on the spectroscopic techniques which could provide long-path measurements of atmospheric trace gases over extended areas of interest. An example of this is the differential optical absorption spectroscopy (DOAS). It has been applied to monitor atmospheric air pollution such as nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and aerosol in a complex urban environment (Edner et al., 1993). A novel laser absorption spectroscopy based system for monitoring greenhouse gases was developed by Spectral Sensor Solutions LLC and Atmospheric and Environmental Research, Inc. (AER). This system, known as the Greenhouse gas Laser Imaging Tomography Experiment (GreenLITE), consists of a set of continuously operating laser-based transceivers and a set of retroreflectors separated by a few kilometers. Both data collection and data processing components are based on the intensity-modulated continuous-wave (IM-CW) measurement technique, which is described in detail in Dobler et al. (2017). This instrument provides estimates of the average CO2 concentrations along the line of sight defined by the path between a laser-based transceiver and any given retroreflector. The path between a transceiver and a retroreflector is referred to as a “chord”. The GreenLITE system was developed and deployed as part of several field campaigns over the past several years (Dobler et al., 2013, 2017). These field tests have included extended operations at industrial facilities and have shown that the system is capable of identifying and spatially locating point sources of greenhouse gases (CO2 and CH4) within a test area (∼1 km2). In conjunction with the 21st Conference of Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP 21), the GreenLITE system was deployed for a long-duration field test over central Paris, France. The objective was to demonstrate the potential of CO2 concentration measurements along 30 horizontal chords ranging in length from 2.3 to 5.2 km and covering an area of 25 km2. The aim of this field campaign was to demonstrate the ability of GreenLITE to monitor the temporal and spatial variations in near-surface atmospheric CO2 concentrations over the complex urban environment. In addition, these measurements may be used for post-deployment analysis of the CO2 distribution with the ultimate goal of revealing the CO2 emission distribution. As a first step, the objectives of this work are to assess the information content of the GreenLITE data, to analyze the atmospheric CO2 distribution, and to characterize precisely the processes that lead to dilution and mixing of the anthropogenic emissions, which can provide new insights compared to the present in situ point measurement approaches due to a much wider spatial coverage.

The collection of the GreenLITE atmospheric CO2 measurements in Paris makes it possible to evaluate and potentially improve meteorological and atmospheric transport models coupled to CO2 emission inventories. On the other hand, the modeling system is expected to provide interpretations of the temporal and spatial variations in the GreenLITE data, with the aim of supporting the development of CO2 atmospheric inversion systems at the city scale. Here we compare GreenLITE CO2 data with simulations performed with the Weather Research and Forecasting Model coupled with a chemistry transport model (WRF-Chem). The WRF-Chem model allows various choices of physics parameterizations and data assimilation methods for constraining the meteorological fields (Deng et al., 2017; Lian et al., 2018). Previous studies have shown that it is necessary to account for specific urban effects when modeling the transport and dispersion of CO2 over complex urban areas such as Salt Lake City, UT, and Los Angeles, CA (Nehrkorn et al., 2013; Feng et al., 2016). Nevertheless, even when the urban environment is accounted for, the modeling of atmospheric transport is a challenge. Significant mismatches remain between modeled and measured concentrations that could be explained by transport biases, particularly at night, and vertical mixing during the day.

In this study, we present the results from a set of 1-year simulations (from December 2015 to November 2016) of CO2 concentrations over the Paris megacity based on the WRF-Chem model coupled with two urban canopy schemes at a horizontal resolution of 1 km. The simulated CO2 concentrations are compared with observations from the GreenLITE laser system as well as in situ CO2 measurements taken continuously at six stations located within the Paris city limits and surrounding area. The detailed objectives of this paper are (i) to analyze in detail the information content of the GreenLITE data in addition to conventional in situ CO2 measurements in order to better understand the temporal and spatial variations in near-surface CO2 concentrations over Paris and its vicinity; (ii) to evaluate the performance of the high-resolution WRF-Chem model coupled with two urban canopy schemes (Urban Canopy Model – UCM; Building Effect Parameterization – BEP) for the transport of CO2 over the Paris megacity area based on the two types of CO2 measurements; (iii) to discuss the potential implications of assimilating the GreenLITE data into the CO2 atmospheric inversion system with the ultimate goal of increasing the robustness of the quantification of city emissions and constraining the spatial distribution of the emissions within the urban area.

This paper is organized as follows. Sect. 2 provides more details about the GreenLITE deployment in conjunction with the in situ CO2 monitoring network in Paris. The WRF-Chem modeling framework and model configurations are presented in Sect. 3. In Sect. 4, we evaluate the performance of the WRF-Chem simulations based on the analyses of the temporal and spatial patterns of observed and modeled CO2 concentrations. Discussions and conclusions are given in Sect. 5.

2 The observation network

2.1 In situ measurements

Since 2010, a growing network of three to six in situ continuous CO2 monitoring stations has been established in the Île-de-France (IdF) region in coordination with ongoing research projects (e.g., Bréon et al., 2015; Xueref-Remy et al., 2018). These observations are used to understand the variability of atmospheric CO2 concentrations, with the aim to improve the existing bottom–up CO2 emission inventories by providing a top–down constraint through atmospheric inverse modeling. The stations are equipped with high-precision analyzers for monitoring of atmospheric CO2, CO, and CH4 installed on rooftops or towers to increase the area of representativity. All instruments have been regularly calibrated against the WMO cylinders (WMO–CO2–X2007 scale) (Tans et al., 2011).

The locations of the stations are given in Table 1a and are shown in Fig. 1a. Four stations are located within the peri-urban area: the OVS site is located about 26 km southwest of central Paris with a sampling height of 20 m a.g.l. (above the ground level) on the top of a building. The SAC tall tower is located on the Plateau de Saclay (9.5 km southeast of OVS) with two air inlets placed at 15 m and 100 m a.g.l. The other two sites are located at the north (AND) and northeast (COU) edges of the Paris urban area in a mixed urban–rural environment with single inlets at 60 m and 30 m a.g.l. These four peri-urban stations are complemented by in situ continuous measurements at two urban stations: one at the Cité des Sciences et de l'Industrie (CDS) and one at the former Pierre and Marie Curie University (now Sorbonne University, also called Jussieu; JUS). The inlets for each of the sensors are placed at approximately 34 m and 30 m a.g.l. The JUS station is on the roof of a building close to ventilation outlets and may be influenced by this and other localized sources of CO2. The JUS site was only measuring CO2 continuously from January to April 2016 and from 16 September 2016 through the end of this study. The spatial distribution of the monitoring sites was chosen a priori to best enable the analysis of gradients due to emissions in Paris when the wind is blowing from either the southwest or northeast directions, which corresponds to the prevailing winds in the region (Bréon et al., 2015; Staufer et al., 2016; Xueref-Remy et al., 2018).

Table 1Information about CO2 observation stations used in this study.

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2.2 The GreenLITE campaign over Paris

The GreenLITE system was deployed in Paris in November 2015 as a proof-of-concept demonstration during the COP 21 conference, and kept operating for 1 year. This system used two transceivers coupled with 15 retroreflectors to measure the CO2 concentrations along 30 intertwined lines (chords) of 2.3–5.2 km length covering an area of 25 km2 over the center of Paris. Each transceiver used two fiber-coupled distributed feedback lasers to generate an absorption line at a wavelength of 1571.112 nm and an off-line wavelength with significantly lower absorptions (nominally 1571.061 nm). The experimental design and layout examined in this study are given in Table 1b and are illustrated in Fig. 1b. The two transceivers were located on two rooftops: one on the lower of the two Montparnasse buildings (T1) (50.3 m a.g.l.) and the other on the Jussieu tower (T2) (86.8 m a.g.l.) located near the JUS in situ instrument. These locations were chosen based on a clear line of sight to the retroreflectors which were installed on additional rooftops around the city with heights varying from 16.8 to 50.4 m a.g.l. For this implementation, each transceiver scanned the retroreflectors in sequence and made a transmission measurement of each chord with a period of 4 min. The experiment lasted from November 2015 to November 2016 with some sporadic downtime of either the transceivers and/or some of the reflectors.

https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/19/13809/2019/acp-19-13809-2019-f01

Figure 1(a) Distribution of in situ CO2 measurements and the GreenLITE laser system. The city of Paris is located within the inner line, but the urban area extends over a larger surface, very roughly within the Greater Paris area (including Paris and the three administrative areas that are around Paris called “Petite Couronne” in French; see Fig. S5). The Île-de-France region covers an area that is larger than the domain shown here. (b) The GreenLITE laser system layout and its chord labels. Data sources: the ASTER global digital elevation model (GDEM) Version 2 data are available at https://lpdaac.usgs.gov/products/astgtmv002/ (last access: 12 November 2019); the administrative division map of the Île-de-France region is available at https://www.data.gouv.fr/en/datasets/geofla-departements-idf/ (last access: 12 November 2019) and is the same for Figs. 2, 4, and S5; the building, green space, and waterway information are from OpenStreetMap (© OpenStreetMap contributors 2019, distributed under a Creative Commons BY-SA License.) available at http://download.geofabrik.de/europe/france/ile-de-france-190907-free.shp.zip (last access: 9 September 2019).

Preliminary analysis shows that the original GreenLITE CO2 concentrations have a slow drift of approximately ±5 ppm in comparison to both the nearby in situ measurements (Fig. S1 in the Supplement) and simulations with the CHIMERE transport model driven by operational forecasts from ECMWF using the model configurations that are presented in Staufer et al. (2016). These slowly time-varying differences were most likely due to a slight systematic long-term drift in both the on- and off-line wavelengths as a function of continuous operations. Such drift may induce some nonlinear impacts on the measured concentrations. It is therefore more appropriate to adjust the wavelengths rather than to apply a linear calibration to the retrieved concentrations. Unlike in situ point measurement systems, there is no established method for calibration of long open-path systems to the WMO mole fraction scale used as an international standard for atmospheric CO2 monitoring (Tans et al., 2011). Therefore, a bias correction method was developed by AER (Zaccheo et al., 2019) for addressing observed slowly drifting biases between the GreenLITE prototype system and the two in situ sensors (CDS and JUS) that are near the GreenLITE chords. This method computed a time-varying adjustment to the off-line wavelength based on a nonlinear optimization mechanism. This nonlinear approach adjusts the GreenLITE off-line wavelength considering not only the average values of hourly CO2 concentrations at two in situ stations, but also the corresponding average temperature, relative humidity, atmospheric pressure along the chord, and an optimized online wavelength value during the measurement period. Finally, the median on- and off-line values over a 4 d window were used to recompute the GreenLITE data from all chords using a radiative-transfer-based iterative retrieval scheme based on the line-by-line radiative transfer model (Clough et al., 2005). Even though this approach is not ideal as the two in situ stations and the GreenLITE system do not sample the exact same area, it does provide a well-defined mechanism that reduces the systematic long-term biases with no significant impact on the chord-to-chord variations. Top panels in Fig. S2a and b show the distribution of the absolute values of the daily averaged CO2 concentration difference between all pairs of chords for each transceiver before and after the calibration. The differences between the medians of the re-processed and original inter-chord range, shown in bottom panels in Fig. S2a and b, are within in the range of ±0.5 ppm for T1 and ±2 ppm for T2 with the respective yearly mean plus/minus 1 standard deviation of 0.04±0.16 ppm for T1 and 0.48±0.43 ppm for T2.

In order to enable the data to be compared to hourly in situ observations and WRF-Chem outputs, hourly means are computed from the 4 min GreenLITE data after applying the calibration approach described above. Two additional selection criteria were also established for this work: (i) a minimum of three valid 4 min samples were necessary to generate a valid hourly average for a given chord, and (ii) the standard deviation of these samples had to be smaller than 10 ppm. The 10 ppm threshold was selected to be roughly 3 times the typical standard deviation of the 4 min measurements for any given chord within a 1 h period (Fig. S3). Data that do not meet the above criteria, about 1.06 % of the total, were considered invalid and excluded from further analysis.

3 Modeling framework

3.1 WRF-Chem model setup

A set of high-resolution simulations of atmospheric CO2 concentrations was performed with WRF-Chem V3.9.1 online coupled with the diagnostic biosphere Vegetation Photosynthesis and Respiration Model (VPRM) (Mahadevan et al., 2008; Ahmadov et al., 2007, 2009). The simulations were carried out over the period spanning September 2015 to November 2016, in which the first 3 months were regarded as a spin-up period. Three one-way nested domains were employed with the horizontal grid resolution of 25, 5, and 1 km, covering Europe (Domain 01), Northern France (Domain 02), and the IdF region (Domain 03), respectively (Fig. S4). The meteorological initial and lateral boundary conditions were imposed using the ERA-Interim global reanalyses with 0.75× 0.75 horizontal resolution and 6-hourly intervals (Berrisford et al., 2011). We nudged the 3-D fields of temperature and wind to the ERA-Interim reanalysis in layers above the planetary boundary layer (PBL) of the outer two domains using the grid nudging option in WRF. We also assimilated observation surface weather station data (ds461.0) and upper-air meteorological fields (ds351.0) from the Research Data Archive at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (https://rda.ucar.edu/datasets/ds351.0/, last access: 12 November 2019; https://rda.ucar.edu/datasets/ds461.0/, last access: 12 November 2019) using a nudging technique (the surface analysis nudging and observation nudging options of WRF are described in detail in Lian et al., 2018). Details regarding the model configurations used in this study are summarized in Table 2.

Table 2A summary of WRF-Chem configurations used in this study.

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The urban canopy parameterization is a critical element in reproducing the lower boundary conditions and thermal structures, which are of vital importance for accurate modeling of the transport and dispersion of CO2 within the urban areas. We therefore paid special attention, in this study, to examining the impact of the two available urban canopy schemes on WRF-Chem transport results, namely the single-layer UCM (Chen et al., 2011) and the multilayer urban canopy model BEP (Martilli et al., 2002). This study does not assess the multilayer urban parameterization BEP+BEM (BEP combined with the Building Energy Model, BEM) (Salamanca et al., 2010) since this parameterization focuses on the impact of heat emitted by air conditioners, which are not commonly used in Paris. This study used 34 vertical layers in WRF–UCM with the top model pressure set at 100 hPa, and 15 layers arranged below 1.5 km with the first layer top at approximately 19 m a.g.l. In order to take full advantage of the WRF–BEP configuration, it is necessary to have a fine discretization of the vertical levels close to the surface. This configuration with 44 vertical layers, places 25 of them within the lowest 1.5 km, with the lowest level being around 3.8 m  a.g.l. In order to select an adequate model physical configuration for Paris, we carried out some preliminary sensitivity experiments to test the impact of different physical schemes on the simulated CO2 concentrations. These tests use up to five different PBL schemes and two urban canopy schemes. The simulations were carried out for 2 months: 1 winter month (January 2016) and 1 summer month (July 2016). These preliminary sensitivity results indicate that different PBL schemes in the WRF-Chem model lead to monthly average differences of 2–3 ppm on the simulated CO2 concentrations over Paris, whereas the two different urban canopy schemes lead to much larger differences of 8–10 ppm. Thus in this study, we carried out the 1-year simulation with two different urban canopy schemes as they are sufficient to address the paper's main question regarding the ability of a configuration of the WRF-Chem model to simulate the CO2 atmospheric transport in an urban environment, but also to provide an estimate of the modeling uncertainty. All of the other physics options remained the same for the two experiments (Table 2): the WRF Single Moment 6-class (WSM6) microphysics scheme (Hong and Lim, 2006), the Rapid Radiative Transfer Model (RRTM) longwave radiation scheme (Mlawer et al., 1997), the Dudhia shortwave radiation scheme (Dudhia, 1989), the Mellor–Yamada–Janjić (MYJ) PBL scheme (Janjić, 1990, 1994), the Eta Similarity surface layer scheme (Janjić, 1996), and the Unified Noah land-surface scheme (Chen and Dudhia, 2001). The Grell 3-D ensemble cumulus convection scheme (Grell and Dévényi, 2002) was applied for Domain 01 only in both experiments.

3.2CO2 simulations

3.2.1 Anthropogenic CO2 fluxes

Anthropogenic CO2 fluxes within the IdF region are imposed using the AIRPARIF inventory for the year 2010 at spatiotemporal resolutions of 1 km and 1 h (AIRPARIF, 2013). This inventory is based on various anthropogenic activity data, emission factors and spatial distribution proxies, which are described in detail in Bréon et al. (2015). It provides maps and diurnal variations for 5 typical months (January, April, July, August, and October) and 3 typical days (a weekday, Saturday, and Sunday) to account for the seasonal, weekly and diurnal cycles of the emissions (see Fig. 3 in Bréon et al., 2015). CO2 emissions from fossil fuel CO2 sources outside the IdF region are taken from the inventory of the European greenhouse gas emissions, together with country-specific temporal profiles (monthly, daily, and hourly) at a spatial resolution of 5 km (updated in October 2005). This inventory was developed by the Institute of Economics and the Rational Use of Energy (IER), University of Stuttgart, under the CarboEurope-IP project (http://www.carboeurope.org/, last access: 12 November 2019).

Both inventories are adapted to the WRF-Chem model for the period of simulation (September 2015–November 2016). Moreover, we scale these two data sets to account for annual changes in emission between the base years and simulation timeframe. This is accomplished by rescaling the maps with the ratio of the annual budgets of national CO2 emissions for the countries within the domain between the base year 2005 for IER and 2010 for AIRPARIF and the year of simulation (2015/2016), taken from Le Quéré et al. (2018) (https://www.icos-cp.eu/GCP/2018, last access: 12 November 2019). See also Table S1 in the Supplement for details about original data sources). Finally, we interpolate the emissions onto the WRF-Chem grids, making sure to conserve the total budget of emission in the process, as done in previous studies (e.g., Ahmadov et al., 2007). Note that for the point sources such as stacks, industries, and mines, CO2 emissions are distributed over a single grid cell corresponding to their locations. Figure 2 shows the spatial distribution of the total CO2 emissions for a weekday in March over the IdF region at the resolution of 1 km × 1 km. It can be seen that there is a large spatial variability of CO2 emissions ranging from 0 to more than 600 g CO2 m−2 d−1 in this area and the largest emissions are concentrated over the Greater Paris area, accounting for about 50 % of the emitted CO2.

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Figure 2Total CO2 emissions, according to the AIRPARIF inventory (within IdF) and the IER inventory (outside IdF), for a weekday in March 2016. Panel (a) shows the CO2 emissions over the IdF region together with the in situ measurement stations. Panel (b) is a high-resolution zoom of the inner Paris area and shows the 1 km emissions together with the GreenLITE chords and two urban in situ measurement stations.

Based on the analysis of sectorally specific fossil fuel CO2 emissions over the IdF region by Wu et al. (2016), we group the detailed sectoral AIRPARIF emissions into five main sectors, namely building (43 %), energy (14 %), surface traffic (29 %), aviation-related surface emissions (4 %), and all other sectors (10 %), where the percentages in parenthesis express the relative contribution of each sector to the yearly total. All emissions are injected in the first model layer. Distinct CO2 tracers are used for each of the five main sectors in the transport model to record their distinct CO2 atmospheric signature. Figure 3 shows averages at the monthly scale of emissions below the GreenLITE chords for those different sectors. It illustrates that CO2 emissions have a large seasonal cycle, mostly due to the residential heating (the “building” sector) which is strongly driven by variations in the atmospheric temperature. Figure 3 also reveals lower emissions for those chords (TX and R01-03) in the west of Paris than those in the other quadrants.

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Figure 3Averaged anthropogenic CO2 fluxes along each GreenLITE chord according to the AIRPARIF inventory.

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3.2.2 Biogenic CO2 fluxes

Biogenic CO2 fluxes are simulated with the VPRM model forced by meteorological fields simulated by WRF and online-coupled to the atmospheric transport. VPRM uses the simulated downward shortwave radiation and surface temperatures, along with the vegetation indices (enhanced vegetation index and land surface water index) derived from the 8 d MODIS Surface Reflectance Product (MOD09A1) and four parameters for each vegetation category (PAR0, λ, α, β) that are optimized against eddy covariance flux measurements over Europe collected during the Integrated EU project “CarboEurope-IP” (http://www.carboeurope.org/, last access: 12 November 2019). The land cover data used by VPRM (see Fig. S5) are derived from the 1 km global Synergetic Land Cover Product (SYNMAP; Jung et al., 2006) reclassified into eight different vegetation classes (Ahmadov et al., 2007, 2009).

Figure 4a shows the spatial distribution of daytime-averaged (06:00–18:00 UTC) CO2 biogenic flux (the net ecosystem CO2 exchange, hereafter NEE, with a negative sign indicating net CO2 uptake by the vegetation surface) in June 2016. The model simulates negative values of NEE (uptake of more than 5 gCO2 m−2 d−1) over most of the region with the exception in urban areas where the values are assigned to 0. Figure 4b shows the mean diurnal cycles of NEE for 12 calendar months and for eight vegetation classes used in VPRM over Domain 03. The magnitude of NEE is highly dependent on the vegetation types, although the diurnal cycles are similar across these vegetation types. From November to January, the VPRM estimates within the IdF region show a small diurnal cycle and a positive NEE explained by ecosystem respiration exceeding gross primary productivity. One exception to positive wintertime NEE is for evergreen trees which, according to the VPRM model, sustain enough gross primary productivity to keep a negative daytime NEE throughout the year. The model shows large CO2 uptake between late spring and early summer. Note that the seasonal cycle of crops, which dominates over the IdF region, is somewhat different from that of forests, with an NEE that decreases after the harvest in June/July; this crop phenology signal is being driven by the MOD09A1 data. Grasses also have a shorter uptake period than the other vegetation types, with a positive NEE as early as August.

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Figure 4(a) Daytime (06:00–18:00 UTC) average of CO2 biogenic flux (NEE) in June 2016; (b) mean diurnal cycles of CO2 biogenic flux (NEE) for 12 calendar months and for eight vegetation classes used in VPRM over Domain 03.

3.2.3 Initial and lateral boundary conditions for CO2

Initial and lateral boundary conditions for CO2 concentration fields used in the WRF-Chem model are taken from the 3-hourly fields of the CAMS global CO2 atmospheric inversion product (Chevallier, 2017a, b) with a horizontal resolution of 3.75× 1.90 (longitude × latitude) and 39 vertical levels between the surface and the tropopause.

4 Results

4.1 Time series and general statistics

The continuous CO2 concentration measurement network in the IdF region provides an invaluable opportunity for model validation and data interpretation. In this work, the correlation coefficient, root-mean-square error (RMSE), and mean bias error (MBE) metrics are first used to compare the performance of the WRF-Chem model with respect to the observed CO2 concentrations from both the GreenLITE laser system and in situ continuous stations. In order to compare them with the GreenLITE measurements, the modeling results are sampled and integrated along the chord lines, accounting for their positions and heights. For the in situ point measurements, we simply use the CO2 values from the 1 km WRF-Chem grid cell that contains the observation location.

Table 3, together with Table S2 and Fig. S6, shows the statistics of all the hourly differences between the observed and modeled CO2 concentrations and the hourly afternoon differences (11:00–16:00 UTC), from December 2015 to November 2016 using the two model configurations (UCM, BEP). The results presented in the Taylor diagrams (Fig. S6) are based on the full year of data and the seasonal statistics are summarized in Table 3. In general, the model performance is better during the afternoon, in terms of both correlation and RMSE, than it is for the full day. These results are consistent with previous findings that show the model has little skill at reproducing the CO2 fields during the nighttime due to poor representation of vertical mixing during nighttime conditions and in the morning due to inadequate depiction of PBL growth (e.g., Bréon et al., 2015; Boon et al. 2016). Given the better performance of the WRF-Chem model in the afternoon, we focus the following analyses on CO2 concentrations acquired during this period of the day only.

Table 3Seasonal statistics for observed and modeled hourly afternoon CO2 concentrations for two urban canopy schemes (UCM, BEP) from December 2015 to November 2016. DJF denotes December–January–February, MAM denotes March–April–May, JJA denotes June–July–August, and SON denotes September–October–November. The color highlights the value in the cell, with the minimum in blue, the median in white, and the maximum in red. All other cells are colored proportionally.

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The other significant feature is that the UCM scheme shows a large positive bias (8.7–19.6 ppm) with respect to the observations within the city during autumn and winter. In contrast, the statistics for the BEP scheme compared to the observations are significantly better with clear improvements in the correlation and substantial decreases in both the RMSE and MBE. It is well known that the lower part of the atmosphere is, on average, more stable in winter than in summer (Gates, 1961). As a consequence, a significant fraction of the emitted CO2 remains close to the surface, so that its atmospheric concentrations are, in winter, highly sensitive to local fluxes and variations in vertical mixing, especially in the complex urban areas. The statistics are highly dependent on the choice of the urban canopy scheme, which strongly suggests that the large UCM model–measurement mismatches in winter are linked to difficulties in modeling the vertical mixing within the urban canopy. It is worth noting that CO2 concentrations are better reproduced by both UCM and BEP in the spring, with correlations that fluctuate between 0.51 and 0.82 across stations. Both urban canopy schemes show lower correlations during summer (0.45–0.63). These lower values are mostly due to the smaller variability of the concentration rather than a higher measurement–model mismatch. Moreover, the UCM and BEP also have comparable performances at peri-urban areas, while the BEP is slightly better at some suburban sites as shown by the statistics. The smallest errors (both in terms of RMSE and bias) are found at Saclay with a measurement inlet that is well above the sources at 100 m a.g.l. (SAC100).

The statistics shown in Table 3, Table S2, and Fig. S6 also indicate the ability of the models to reproduce the CO2 at two urban in situ stations (JUS & CDS) and the GreenLITE measurements. As for the GreenLITE data, we first compute the hourly averages of the observed and modeled CO2 concentrations over all 15 chords for each transceiver (T1 and T2) and then calculate the respective statistics. In general, the model performance is similar for the two types of urban measurements, whereas the performance for urban measurements is slightly inferior to that of the suburban (both in terms of RMSE and correlation). The correlations with observations are better for T1 and T2 than for the two urban in situ sites, which may be due to the fact that T1 and T2 represent an average over a wide area. Therefore, the GreenLITE data are less sensitive to local unresolved sources than the in situ measurements. The RMSE with the BEP scheme is within the range of 4.5 to 9.6 ppm for T1, which is substantially superior to those of JUS and CDS, with only one exception at CDS during summer when the value is slightly better for CDS than for T1. In terms of the MBE, the values of T1 are similar to those of CDS, while the BEP simulation reveals an underestimation of CO2 for T2 and JUS, with a negative bias of up to 5.2 ppm.

Figure S7 shows time series of modeled CO2 against daily afternoon mean GreenLITE observations (11:00–16:00 UTC). Again, it clearly illustrates that the UCM scheme overestimates the CO2 concentrations close to the surface within the city during winter. The BEP scheme effectively reproduces the seasonal cycle, as well as most synoptic variations in the atmospheric CO2 measurements. Note that the UCM model–observation discrepancies for T2 are much smaller than those of T1 as the transceiver T2 is 36.5 m higher in altitude, whereas such a difference in modeled CO2 between T1 and T2 is not obvious for the BEP scheme.

4.2 Analyze covariations in CO2 spatial difference with wind

In this section, we analyze the spatial variations in the CO2 concentrations that are (i) measured at the in situ stations, (ii) provided by the GreenLITE system, and (iii) simulated by the WRF-Chem model. The analysis of spatial differences rather than individual values should strongly reduce the signature of the large-scale pattern due to boundary conditions and better highlight that of the Paris emissions (Bréon et al., 2015). This makes it possible to further evaluate some characteristics of the model and the measurement data.

4.2.1 In situ measurement

We analyze the horizontal differences between pairs of in situ stations as a function of wind speed and direction, expecting a larger concentration at the downwind station with respect to the upwind station, in this region of high emission. For wind fields, we use the ECMWF high-resolution operational forecasts (HRES) linearly interpolated at the hourly resolution and extracted at a height of around 25 m a.g.l. (https://www.ecmwf.int/en/forecasts/datasets/set-i, last access: 12 November 2019) as a proxy for all stations located within the IdF region. The HRES wind product is used here for two reasons: firstly, our previous study has shown that the wind speeds provided by HRES are, in general, closer to the observations than those provided by WRF (Lian et al., 2018). Secondly, the WRF-Chem model was run with two configurations (UCM and BEP urban canopy schemes) in this study. If we make use of the modeled winds, the UCM and BEP modeled CO2 spatial differences should be analyzed using their corresponding modeled wind fields, and the observed winds are then needed for the analysis of the observed CO2 spatial differences. However, given the small-scale wind variations reproduced by the model, it is hard to determine from which station the wind data used in the analysis should come. For the purpose of a fair and uniform comparison, we thus use an independent wind product. Furthermore, the hourly afternoon CO2 data are classified into the wind classes with a bin width of 1 m s−1 for wind speed and 11.25 for wind direction. Figure 5 shows the patterns of the observed and modeled CO2 concentration differences between pairs of in situ stations, averaged accounting for the wind classes. The standard deviations of CO2 concentration differences for each wind class are shown in Fig. S8.

https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/19/13809/2019/acp-19-13809-2019-f05

Figure 5Spatial differences in CO2 concentration between two stations of the in situ network, averaged over sets of situation corresponding to bins of wind speed and direction. Only the afternoon (11:00–16:00 UTC) data are used. The top row shows the observations, whereas the other two rows show the two simulations (UCM, BEP). The green line indicates the direction defined by two in situ stations. The statistics of hourly values of observed and modeled CO2 concentration differences are shown in the box.

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Figure 5a shows the observed and modeled CO2 horizontal differences between AND and COU, two suburban stations located to the north of the city of Paris. One expects that stations downwind of sources of emissions would have a higher CO2 concentration than those upwind so that the sign of the difference should vary with the wind direction. For this pair of sites (AND and COU), both the model and observations show the expected pattern with a similar amplitude. The values of RMSE and MBE are 4.53 and −0.14 ppm, respectively, for the BEP scheme, implying a slightly better performance than the UCM scheme (6.34 and −0.47 ppm, respectively).

Figure 5b and c show similar figures but for the CO2 differences between (COU–SAC) and (CDS–SAC). The city of Paris is located between both pairs of stations when the wind is roughly from the northeast or from the southwest directions. Both COU and SAC are located outside of the city and show a pattern with fairly symmetric positive and negative values. Conversely, CDS is in the city of Paris, within an urban environment, and is strongly affected by significant urban emissions from its surroundings. As a consequence, the CDS–SAC differences in concentration are mostly positive for all wind sectors, with the exception of very specific wind conditions (low winds in the 45 northeast sector). The wind speed also has a strong influence on the differences. The CO2 difference signal and its variability are generally larger for smaller wind speeds. The model plots (second and third rows) illustrate that the models reproduce the expected cross-city upwind–downwind differences in CO2 concentrations well. In term of signal amplitude, the BEP scheme is also in better agreement with the observations than the UCM scheme, which is particularly true for the standard deviations shown in Fig. S8.

Conversely, both urban canopy schemes fail to reproduce the wind-related pattern of the observed CDS–JUS difference (Fig. 5d). These observed differences do not show any upwind–downwind patterns and are mostly negative, which can be expected since JUS is close to the city center where strong emissions impact the concentration, whereas CDS is in the middle of a park and is therefore less affected by emissions from its surroundings. The model pattern is dominated by the simple upwind–downwind structure, and it is very much different from the observed values, especially when the winds are from the west to southwest, where the model values are positive and the observed differences are strongly negative. This model–measurement discrepancy is likely the result of a poor description of the emissions in the city center that are not well reproduced by the 1 km resolution inventory with periodic temporal profiles. It may also indicate that the complex urban structure and morphology, such as buildings and street canyons, affect the energy budget and atmospheric transport, all of which lead to fine-scale (sub-kilometer) CO2 concentration features that cannot be captured by the WRF-Chem model at a 1 km horizontal resolution. The in situ point measurement may then not be representative of the average within the larger area (1 km2) that is simulated by the model.

The analysis of the in situ point measurement differences within and around Paris, together with the simulations, indicates that the model reproduces both the general structure and the amplitude of the cross-city differences in CO2 concentrations and the CO2 difference in the Paris surroundings but that it fails to simulate CO2 differences between the two stations located in the inner city.

4.2.2 GreenLITE measurement

One expects that the GreenLITE principle, that provides averaged CO2 concentrations along the chord lines, is less affected by the local unresolved sources of CO2 emissions than the in situ point measurements. Meanwhile, the wide spatial coverage of the GreenLITE system is expected to provide additional information about CO2 spatial variations within the city of Paris. In this section, we focus on the spatial variation in CO2 concentration measured with the GreenLITE system. As a first step, we analyze the distribution of the absolute values of the observed hourly afternoon CO2 difference between all pairs of chords for each month together with their simulated counterparts shown in Fig. 6.

https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/19/13809/2019/acp-19-13809-2019-f06

Figure 6Distribution of the GreenLITE observed and modeled absolute CO2 concentration differences between all pairs of chords for (a) T1 and (b) T2 from December 2015 to November 2016. (c) Distribution of the observed and modeled absolute CO2 concentration differences between JUS and CDS from December 2015 to December 2018. The midpoint, the box, and the whiskers represent the 0.5 quantile, 0.25∕0.75 quantiles, and 0.1∕0.9 quantiles, respectively. Note that only the afternoon data (11:00–16:00 UTC) are used in the analysis.

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We first focus on the winter period (December to February). During that period, the median value of the measured T1 inter-chord range is mostly on the order of 2 ppm. That of T2 is somewhat larger, on the order of 3–4 ppm with some excursions up to 9 ppm. The two simulations with UCM and BEP show very large differences. Whereas BEP simulates spatial variations that are of the right order of magnitude compared to the GreenLITE data, those of UCM are much larger. Thus, the GreenLITE measurements provide clear information that favors the BEP over the UCM. During the winter period, there is little vertical mixing, which leads to large vertical gradients in CO2 concentrations close to the surface. The two simulations differ in their representations of this mixing, which leads to large differences in the modeled CO2 concentrations. Figure S9 shows that the UCM scheme reproduces a much larger vertical gradient in CO2 concentrations close to the surface, a few tens of meters above the emissions than the BEP scheme does during the afternoon (11:00–16:00 UTC). The differences are not as large higher up; neither are they further downwind of the emissions as the vertical gradient is then smoother as a result of mixing.

During the summer period, solar insulation generates more instability and the convection generates vertical mixing that limits the horizontal gradients. Both simulations indicate an inter-chord range of less than a few parts per million. Conversely, the GreenLITE data indicate much larger values, of 3–4 ppm (the median) for T1 and even larger for T2. Further analysis indicates that this spatial variation is mostly systematic, i.e., that some chords are consistently lower or higher than the in situ values. At this point, there are three hypotheses.

  • H1: the spatial differences of T1 and T2 are true features linked to fine-scale spatial variations in the emissions between the west and east part of Paris that are under-represented or not included in the emission inventory.

  • H2: the models fail in the description of CO2 concentrations within the city of Paris because of imperfect representations of atmospheric transport processes, excluding inaccuracies in emissions.

  • H3: there is a chord-dependent bias in some of the GreenLITE chords during the summer period.

To resolve this question, we look at the spatial difference between the in situ sites within the city (JUS-CDS) during summer. Unfortunately, the JUS instrument was not working during the summer of 2016. Therefore, we use the JUS and CDS data over the summers from December 2015 to December 2018 (Fig. 6c). In general, the modeled CO2 concentration differences between pairs of in situ stations are larger than the modeled inter-chord range of the GreenLITE system. During the summer, the observed absolute differences between JUS and CDS are only of a few parts per million (the median is on the order of 2 ppm during July and August). These observations indicate that the spatial differences of CO2 between these two sites within the city of Paris are much smaller during the summer than during the winter and tend to support the modeling results, which would undermine the hypotheses H1 and H2. However, these two stations do not sample the western part of Paris, which is less densely populated with a higher fraction of green areas. The in situ observations do not fully rule out, therefore, the possibility of an impact of the emission spatial structure.

https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/19/13809/2019/acp-19-13809-2019-f07

Figure 7Spatial differences in CO2 concentration between (a) east–middle, (b) east–west, and (c) middle–west parts of the GreenLITE T1 measurement, averaged accounting for wind speed and direction. Only the afternoon (11:00–16:00 UTC) data are used. The top row shows the observations, whereas the other two rows show the two simulations (UCM, BEP). The statistics of hourly values of observed and modeled CO2 concentration difference are shown in the box.

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Another potential source of measurement–model discrepancy is the atmospheric transport modeling as proposed in H2. According to previous studies (e.g., Hu et al., 2010), the turbulent eddies and thermals are unlikely to be reproduced properly by the local closure MYJ PBL scheme, which results in insufficient vertical mixing under convective (unstable) conditions, i.e., during summer. It may also indicate that the WRF-Chem model at a 1 km horizontal resolution cannot reproduce the fine-scale (sub-kilometer) CO2 concentration features over a complex urban environment in Paris, as the analysis of JUS and CDS in situ measurements has shown in Sect. 4.2.1.

Atmospheric transport simulations make it possible to assess the respective contributions of various areas/sectors to the measurements. Our preliminary sensitivity experiments (see Figs. S10 and S11 for details) have shown that the anthropogenic emission from the Greater Paris area is the dominant contribution (∼80 %) to the anthropogenic CO2 signal at the urban measurement stations. In order to get further insights into the characteristics of CO2 spatial variations within the city of Paris, it is therefore necessary to analyze the CO2 differences with the consideration of the anthropogenic CO2 emissions shown in Figs. 2 and 3. We thus group the 15 chords from T1 into three bins according to both their geographic locations and the amounts of anthropogenic CO2 emissions averaged along the chords: the western, middle, and eastern parts consist of reflectors R01–R03, reflectors R06–R08, and reflectors R13–R15, respectively, overlying three different regions within Paris. Figure 7 shows the covariations in the GreenLITE observed and modeled CO2 spatial difference with winds. The standard deviations of CO2 concentration differences for each wind class are shown in Fig. S12.

In Fig. 7b and c, we show the east–west and the middle–west differences, where the CO2 anthropogenic emissions in the western part are systematically lower than the other two regions and the observed CO2 concentrations in the middle and east are on average higher than in the west. The patterns of observed CO2 difference are characterized by positive values no matter where the wind blows. The CO2 differences reproduced by the model are positive in the southwest direction; however, it shows a nearly opposite pattern with those from observations when the wind is from the northeast. A plausible explanation for this is that the influence of kilometer-scale anthropogenic emissions over different parts of Paris on the observed CO2 concentration has a greater effect than the atmospheric transport and dispersion of the fluxes over the period of study.

Figure 7a shows similar figures but for the east–middle difference. There is a better measurement–model agreement than for Fig. 7b and c. Indeed, as expected, the spatial variations in CO2 concentrations show negative values over upwind directions and positive values over downwind directions both for the observation and the model. According to the inventory, the two Paris areas that are covered by the set of chords used here have similar anthropogenic emissions. As a consequence, the overall CO2 concentration difference, as shown in Fig. 7a, is then better linked to the impact of atmospheric transport.

We therefore conclude that the pattern of CO2 concentration differences is consistent with winds only over the areas with similar anthropogenic emissions. In other words, if we compare the CO2 concentrations of the chords overlaying different level of emissions, the model may be insufficient in accurately modulating the dispersion of CO2 emissions, the ventilation, and dilution effects at such a high urban microscale resolution.

5 Summary and conclusions

In this study, we use conventional in situ measurements together with novel GreenLITE laser ones for an analysis of the temporal and spatial variations in the CO2 concentrations within the city of Paris and its vicinity. The analysis also uses 1 km resolution WRF-Chem model coupled with two urban canopy schemes, for the 1-year period from December 2015 to November 2016.

Results show that two urban canopy schemes (UCM, BEP) as part of the WRF-Chem model show similar performances in the areas surrounding the city. They are capable of reproducing the seasonal cycle and most of the synoptic variations in the atmospheric CO2 in situ measurements over the suburban areas, as well as the general corresponding spatial differences in CO2 concentration between pairs of in situ stations that span the urban area.

Within the city, these results show very distinct features during winter and summer:

  • During the winter, the emissions within the city are the highest, mainly due to household heating, and the vertical mixing is low. This combination leads to large temporal, vertical, and horizontal variations in CO2 concentrations. The GreenLITE measurements are less sensitive to local unresolved sources than the in situ point measurements, and are then better suited for the comparison to kilometer-scale modeling. In our analysis, the GreenLITE data are used to clearly demonstrate that the BEP scheme provides a much better description of the CO2 fields within the city than the UCM scheme does.

  • During the summer, the emissions are lower (by a factor of roughly 2 compared to the cold season) and the sun-induced convection makes the vertical mixing much faster than in winter. For this period, both the in situ measurements and the modeling indicate that, during the afternoon, the spatial differences are limited to a few parts per million. Much larger spatial differences are indicated by the GreenLITE system, with systematic east–west variations. Although it is not yet fully understood, several pieces of evidence suggest an increase in measurement noise and bias in some of the GreenLITE chords during the summer season, that must be resolved or reduced before assimilating the whole data set into the CO2 atmospheric inversion system that aims at retrieving urban fluxes.

This study stresses the difficulty in reproducing precisely the atmospheric CO2 concentration within the city because of our inability to represent the detailed spatial structure of the emission and because of the sensitivity of the CO2 concentration to the strength of vertical mixing. There are strong indications that the uncertainty in the vertical mixing is much larger than the uncertainty in the emissions so that atmospheric concentration measurements within the city can hardly be used to constrain the emission inventories.

Code and data availability

All data sets and model results corresponding to this study are available upon request from the corresponding author.

Supplement

The supplement related to this article is available online at: https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-19-13809-2019-supplement.

Author contributions

JL, FMB, GB, and PC contributed to the design and implementation of the research. JL, FMB, GB, PC, TSZ, and JD contributed to the analysis and interpretation of the results. TSZ, JD, MR, and IXR performed the measurements. JS and DS contributed to model input preparation. JL and FMB took the lead in writing the paper with input from all authors.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Harris Corporation and the management of Atmospheric and Environmental Research, Inc. for their support of these ongoing analyses. We acknowledge the support of Francois Ravetta (LATMOS/IPSL) and Sorbonne University, for the installation of the GreenLITE system on the Jussieu Campus. Thanks also to Paris Habitat, Elogie, and Montparnasse ICADE for providing the locations to install the transceivers and reflectors. Finally, thanks to Marc Jamous at Cité des Sciences et de l'Industrie (CDS), to Cristelle Cailteau-Fischbach (LATMOS/IPSL), to OVSQ, and to LSCE/RAMCES technical staff for the maintenance of the in situ monitoring network, coordinated by Delphine Combaz.

Financial support

This research has been supported by the IDEX Paris-Saclay (grant no. ANR-11-IDEX-0003-02) together with Harris Corporation.

Review statement

This paper was edited by Rob MacKenzie and reviewed by three anonymous referees.

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CO2 emissions within urban areas impact nearby and downwind concentrations. A different system, based on bi-wavelength laser measurements, has been deployed over Paris. It samples CO2 concentrations along horizontal lines, between a transceiver and a reflector. In this paper, we analyze the measurements provided by this system, together with the more classical in situ sampling and high-resolution modeling. We focus on the temporal and spatial variability of atmospheric CO2 concentrations.
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