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Airborne measurements of formaldehyde (FA), glycolaldehyde (GA), glyoxal (GL), methylglyoxal (MG), and pyruvic acid (PD) were made on board instrumented aircraft platforms, the Department of Energy G1 and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration P3 (FA only), during the 1995 Nashville/Middle Tennessee Ozone Study. FA data determined on these two aircraft during three intercomparison flights agreed to within ∼10%. The mean and median (in parentheses) concentrations observed within the boundary layer ( 0.8) observed between FA and two other isoprene products, GA and MG. Further, the magnitudes of the nonzero FA intercept exhibited in these correlation plots are found to qualitatively agree with the fraction of precursors that did not concomitantly produce GA and MG. Inspection of specific flights showed direct evidence of the dominance of isoprene as a precursor for FA, appreciable contribution of FA to CO, and negligible decay of FA overnight. Because of the dominant role isoprene plays as a precursor of FA, FA could be used as a proxy of isoprene for assessing the applicability of various versions of biogenic emission inventory.
Lee et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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