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We used an analysis of radical propagation efficiency and OH chain length in a simple trajectory model to propose combinations of long‐lived species that distinguish conditions in which O 3 concentration (O 3 ) is NO x ‐limited and radical‐limited. We further examined these indicators in a three‐dimensional grid model. We proposed several new indicators including H 2 O 2 /(O 3 +NO 2 ), O 3 /NO x , and a measure using the OH rate constant weighted concentrations of NO 2 and hydrocarbons. Our analysis also supports the use of several indicators previously proposed by other researchers, including O 3 /HNO 3 and H 2 O 2 /HNO 3 . We found that HCHO/NO 2 was more useful than the previously proposed HCHO/NO y . We found that the indicators easily distinguished extremely NO x ‐limited or extremely radical‐limited regimes but did not reliably distinguish conditions closer to the transition between these two regimes. We propose that a combined analysis using photochemical model simulations and a large set of indicators of both O 3 sensitivity and local odd oxygen production ( P (O x )) sensitivity to VOC and NO x provides the most complete and useful description of O 3 sensitivity. Time series of the indicators, at least from mid‐morning to late afternoon, provide useful information about the evolution of O 3 sensitivity during the day. Values of the indicators change depending on the O 3 level due in part to the effects of miscellaneous OH and HO 2 termination reactions and to the effects of the composition of the HC mixture on P (O x ). Further evaluation of these indicators using modeling studies, measurements, and test cases with NO x or VOC emissions changes are needed to determine how reliably they distinguish NO x ‐and radical‐limited conditions.
Tonnesen et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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