Difference between revisions of "UKCA Chemistry and Aerosol vn10.9 Tutorial 6"

From UKCA
Line 49: Line 49:
   
 
ratb_t1(N, 'Reactant 1','Reactant 2','<span style="color:blue">Product 1 </span>','<span style="color:red">Product 2 </span>','<span style="color:green">Product 3 </span>',&
 
ratb_t1(N, 'Reactant 1','Reactant 2','<span style="color:blue">Product 1 </span>','<span style="color:red">Product 2 </span>','<span style="color:green">Product 3 </span>',&
'<span style="color:purple">Product 4 </span>', <math>k_{0}</math>, <math>\alpha</math>, <math>\beta</math>, <span style="color:blue">Fraction of Product 1 produced</span>, <span style="color:red">Fraction of Product 2 produced</span>, <span style="color:green">Fraction of Product 3 produced</span>,
+
'<span style="color:purple">Product 4 </span>', <math>k_{0}</math>, <math>\alpha</math>, <math>\beta</math>, <span style="color:blue">Fraction of Product 1 produced</span>, <span style="color:red">Fraction of Product 2 produced</span>,
<span style="color:purple">Fraction of Product 4 produced</span>,<span style="color:red">SCHEME</span>,<span style="color:green">QUALIFIER</span>,<span style="color:blue">DISQUALIFIER</span>,VN), &
+
<span style="color:green">Fraction of Product 3 produced</span>,<span style="color:purple">Fraction of Product 4 produced</span>,<span style="color:red">SCHEME</span>,<span style="color:green">QUALIFIER</span>,<span style="color:blue">DISQUALIFIER</span>,VN), &
   
 
If fractional products are not required for a reaction, then the ''fraction of each product'' formed should be set to 0.00. If fractional products are required for any one of the products then the fraction of each product formed should be set to its correct value.
 
If fractional products are not required for a reaction, then the ''fraction of each product'' formed should be set to 0.00. If fractional products are required for any one of the products then the fraction of each product formed should be set to its correct value.

Revision as of 10:44, 3 January 2018

UKCA Chemistry and Aerosol Tutorials at vn10.9

What you will learn in this tutorial

During this tutorial you will learn how UKCA specifies different chemical reactions. You will then add a new reaction involving the new tracers that you have added.

Task 6.1: Add a bimolecular reaction

TASK 6.1: You should now add in the bimolecular reaction of ALICE with OH to form BOB and a secondary organic compound (labelled in UKCA as Sec_Org). This reaction is given by:

Parameter Value
2.70E-11
0.00
-390.00

Adding new Chemical Reactions

UKCA currently uses two different methods of defining the chemical reactions solved in the model. The first is a backward Euler solver, and is used for the RAQ and StdTrop chemistry schemes where the solver itself is created by a code-writer. The second makes use of the ASAD chemical integration software package, and is used for the CheT/TropIsop, CheS/Strat, and CheST/StratTrop chemistry schemes. ASAD can use many different solvers, although currently it uses a symbolic Newton-Raphson solver. In this tutorial we will only consider the ASAD framework, as this is easily extended by a user.

ASAD considers four different types of chemical reactions: bimolecular reactions, termolecular reactions, heterogeneous reactions, and photolysis reactions. To make changes and add reactions you will need to make changes to the UKCA source code which can be found in

vn10.9_your_branch_name/src/atmosphere/UKCA

During this tutorial you will be tasked with adding a new reaction into your branch.

Biomolecular Reactions

For most bimolecular reactions, it is sufficient to provide the , , and coefficients that are used to compute the rate coefficient from the Arrhenius expression

Bimolecular Reaction Definition

The bimolecular reactions are defined in the ukca_chem_master.F90 module using the ratb_t1 Fortran type specification, and are held in arrays. At the end of this routine the ratb_defs_master array is created from these, and if that scheme is selected in UKCA these reactions are copied across into the master ratb_defs array.

The format of this ratb_t1 type (defined in ukca_chem_defs_mod.F90) is

ratb_t1(N, 'Reactant 1','Reactant 2','Product 1 ','Product 2 ','Product 3 ',&
'Product 4 ',  ,  ,  , Fraction of Product 1 produced, Fraction of Product 2 produced,  
Fraction of Product 3 produced,Fraction of Product 4 produced,SCHEME,QUALIFIER,DISQUALIFIER,VN), & 

If fractional products are not required for a reaction, then the fraction of each product formed should be set to 0.00. If fractional products are required for any one of the products then the fraction of each product formed should be set to its correct value.

The settings for N, SCHEME, QUALIFIER, DISQUALIFIER, and VN are the same as in the adding new tracers tutorial, although here N should be incremented for each new reaction, where there might be the same reaction specified several times with changes to reaction rates or even species.

The specifications of the individual reactions are done as, e.g.

! B041 IUPAC2005
ratb_t1(41,'EtOO      ','NO        ','MeCHO     ','HO2       ','NO2       ',&
'          ',2.55e-12,  0.00, -380.00, 0.00, 0.00, 0.00, 0.00,ST+R,0,0,107),&
ratb_t1(41,'EtOO      ','NO        ','MeCHO     ','HO2       ','NO2       ',&
'          ',2.60e-12,  0.00, -380.00, 0.00, 0.00, 0.00, 0.00,TI+T,0,0,107),&
! B060 JPL2011
ratb_t1(60,'HO2       ','NO        ','OH        ','NO2       ','          ',&
'          ',3.30e-12,  0.00, -270.00, 0.00, 0.00, 0.00, 0.00,ST+R,0,0,107),&
ratb_t1(60,'HO2       ','NO        ','OH        ','NO2       ','          ',&
'          ',3.50e-12,  0.00, -250.00, 0.00, 0.00, 0.00, 0.00,S,0,0,107),&
ratb_t1(60,'HO2       ','NO        ','OH        ','NO2       ','          ',&
'          ',3.60e-12,  0.00, -270.00, 0.00, 0.00, 0.00, 0.00,TI+T,0,0,107),&
! B132 JPL2011
! Not in TI/R scheme
ratb_t1(132,'O(3P)     ','OH        ','O2        ','HO2         ','          ',&
'          ',1.80e-11,  0.00, -180.00, 0.00, 0.00, 0.00, 0.00,T,0,0,107),&
ratb_t1(132,'O(3P)     ','OH        ','O2        ','H         ','          ',&
'          ',1.80e-11,  0.00, -180.00, 0.00, 0.00, 0.00, 0.00,ST,0,0,107),&
ratb_t1(132,'O(3P)     ','OH        ','O2        ','H         ','          ',&
'          ',2.40e-11,  0.00, -110.00, 0.00, 0.00, 0.00, 0.00,S,0,0,107),&

The first reaction in these examples takes its kinetic data from IUPAC. Going to this website, this reaction is defined here. The second and third reaction above take their kinetic data from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The rate for this can be found on page 1-19 of the JPL2011 document. You can see that in the instances above, different chemistry schemes use slightly different rates or species, as may be required by the scheme and species considered.

When adding new reactions you will need to increment the size of the array holding the ratb_t1 type.

To add new bimolecular reactions you will need to append equivalent lines for the new reactions to the end of the ratb_defs_master array (increasing the array sizes accordingly). If there is a reaction that is an exception to the general Arrhenius equation then special code needs to be placed in the asad_bimol.F90 routine, which is held in the UKCA/ source-code directory.

Termolecular Reactions

As well as defining reactions involving a third body, the termolecular rate definition can also be used to define unimolecular reactions.

The pressure and temperature dependent rate, , of a termolecular reaction is given by

where the low pressure rate constant is given by

and the high pressure rate constant is given by

Termolecular Reaction Definition

The termolecular reactions are defined in the ukca_chem_master.F90 module using the ratt_t1 Fortran type specification and are held in the ratt_defs_master array.

To format of this ratt_t1 type is

ratt_t(N,'Reactant 1','Reactant 2','Product 1 ','Product 2 ', , &
,  ,  , ,  ,  , Fraction of Product 1 produced, Fraction of Product 2 produced,SCHEME,QUALIFIER,

DISQUALIFIER,VN), &

and as in rabt_t1, where the fraction of a product should be set to 0.0 if this functionality does not need to be used.

The settings for N, SCHEME, QUALIFIER, DISQUALIFIER, and VN are the same as in the adding new tracers tutorial, although here N should be incremented for each new reaction, where there might be the same reaction specified several times with changes to reaction rates or even species.

The value is used to define the value by

If then
else

as may or may not be highly temperature dependent.

Examples of these reactions are

! T024 IUPAC 2001
ratt_t1(24,'NO        ','NO        ','NO2       ','NO2       ',     0.0,&
  3.30e-39,  0.00,-530.,  0.00e+00,  0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, T+ST,0,0,107),&
! B; not in TI/TI scheme
ratt_t1(24,'NO        ','NO        ','NO2       ','NO2       ',     0.0,&
  6.93e-40,  0.00,-530.,  0.00e+00,  0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, S,0,0,107),&
ratt_t1(25,'SO2       ','OH        ','SO3       ','HO2       ',     0.6,&
  3.00e-31, -3.30, 0.00,  1.50e-12,  0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, ST+S,A,0,107),&
ratt_t1(25,'SO2       ','OH        ','HO2       ','H2SO4     ',     0.6,&
  3.00e-31, -3.30, 0.00,  1.50e-12,  0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, TI,A,0,107),&
ratt_t1(25,'SO2       ','OH        ','H2SO4     ','          ',     0.6,&
  3.00e-31, -3.30, 0.00,  1.50e-12,  0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0, OL,A,0,107),&


To add new termolecular reactions you will need to append equivalent lines for the new reactions to the end of the ratt_defs_master array (increasing the array sizes accordingly). If there is any special code that needs to be added, this should be placed in the asad_trimol.F90 routine, which is held in the UKCA/ source-code directory.

Heterogeneous Reactions

Heterogeneous reactions are those that occur on aerosol surfaces. There is no functional form defined for these reactions, with special code needed to be added for each case.

Heterogeneous Reaction Definition

The heterogeneous reactions are defined in the ukca_chem_master.F90 module using the rath_t1 Fortran type specification, usually in one array (rath_defs_master).

To format of this rath_t1 type is

rath_t(N,'Reactant 1','Reactant 2','Product 1 ','Product 2 ','Product 3 ',&
'Product 4 ', Fraction of Product 1 produced, Fraction of Product 2 produced, Fraction of Product 3 produced, 
Fraction of Product 4 produced,SCHEME,QUALIFIER,DISQUALIFIER,VN), & 

i.e. there is no rate information provided. For reactions on PSCs special code has been added to the routines in ukca_hetero_mod.F90, and for other reactions there is code in asad_hetero.F90.

The settings for N, SCHEME, QUALIFIER, DISQUALIFIER, and VN are the same as in the adding new tracers tutorial, although here N should be incremented for each new reaction, where there might be the same reaction specified several times with changes to reaction rates or even species.

Examples of this type are

nrath_t1(2,'ClONO2    ','HCl       ','Cl        ','Cl        ','HONO2     ', &
'          ', 0.000, 0.000, 0.000, 0.000, S+ST,HP,0,107), &
!HSO3+H2O2(aq)
rath_t1(6,'SO2       ','H2O2      ','NULL0     ','          ','          ', &
'          ', 0.000, 0.000, 0.000, 0.000, TI+S+ST+OL+R,A,0,107),             &

To add new heterogeneous reactions you will need to append equivalent lines for the new reactions to the end of the array (increasing the array sizes accordingly), before adding code to either ukca_hetero_mod.F90 (for stratospheric reactions) or asad_hetero.F90 (for tropospheric reactions).

Photolysis Reactions

These define a reaction where a chemical compound is broken down by photons. There is no functional form defined for this type of reaction. Instead, either (in the troposphere) input files are used to define the reaction rates for each species, while (in the stratosphere) on-line look-up tables are generated for the rates for each species, or a separate photolysis code, Fast-JX, is used to interactively calculate the rate of reaction throughout the the whole atmosphere (for Fast-JX). These interactive schemes are preferred as they take the effect of aerosols or clouds into account at each timestep, allowing for more feedbacks to be investigated. In the upper stratosphere there are some wavelength regions that Fast-JX does not consider, and so the 3D on-line look-up tables are also used for these regions.

Tropospheric Off-Line Photolysis

If Fast-JX is not being used, then the off-line two-dimensional (zonally average) tropospheric photolysis is used (for all schemes). It is based on the work of Hough (1988)[1] and Law et al (1998)[2].

This scheme makes use of datafiles which define the reaction rate for a particular species (e.g. H2O2), or if no rate is known, a nil rate can be used. For vn10.4 these files can be found in

$UMDIR/vn10.4/ctldata/UKCA/tropdata/photol

To use this scheme set the value of i_ukca_photol by clicking 2D Photolysis Scheme. You will then need to give the location of the files (above). The code controlling this scheme is held in ukca_phot2d.F90.

It is advised that this scheme is no longer used, and Fast-JX interactive photolysis should be used instead.

References

  1. Hough, A. M.: The calculation of photolysis rates for use in global modelling studies, Tech. rep., UK Atomic Energy Authority, Harwell, Oxon., UK, 1988
  2. Law, K., Plantevin, P., Shallcross, D., Rogers, H., Pyle, J., Grouhel, C., Thouret, V., and Marenco, A.: Evaluation of modeled O3 using Measurement of Ozone by Airbus In-Service Aircraft (MOZAIC) data, J. Geophys. Res., 103, 25721–25737, 1998

Stratospheric Look-Up Table Photolysis

In a chemistry scheme which has stratospheric chemistry, such as CheS/Strat and CheST/StratTrop, if interactive photolysis is not used, then above 300hPa the look-up table approach of Lary and Pyle (1991)[1] is used (below 300hPa the tropospheric scheme described above is used). To use this scheme set the value of i_ukca_photol by clicking 2D Photolysis Scheme. The code for this scheme is held in ukca_strat_update.F90.

References

  1. Lary, D. and Pyle, J.: Diffuse-radiation, twilight, and photochemistry, J. Atmos. Chem., 13, 393–406, 1991.

Interactive Photolysis

The original Fast-J scheme (Wild et al, 2000)[1] uses 7 different wavelength bins appropriate for the troposphere, and the updated Fast-JX scheme (Neu et al, 2007)[2] adds up to an extra 11 bins allowing use in the stratosphere. At vn10.4 only Fast-JX is available, although previous UM version used Fast-J as well.

To use this scheme set the value of i_ukca_photol by clicking FastJ-X. You will then need to give the location of several input data files used by this scheme.

Further details on how the the Fast-JX scheme is used in UKCA, can be found in Telford et al (2013)[3].

The Fast-JX data files are held in

$UMDIR/vn10.9/ctldata/UKCA/fastj

on ARCHER.

References

  1. Wild, O., Zhu, X., and Prather, M.: Fast-J: accurate simulation of in- and below-cloud photolysis in tropospheric chemical models, J. Atmos. Chem., 37, 245–282, doi:10.1023/A:1006415919030, 2000
  2. Neu, J., Prather, M., and Penner, J.: Global atmospheric chemistry: integrating over fractional cloud cover, J. Geophys. Res., 112, D11306, 12 pp., doi:10.1029/2006JD008007, 2007
  3. Telford, P. J., Abraham, N. L., Archibald, A. T., Braesicke, P., Dalvi, M., Morgenstern, O., O'Connor, F. M., Richards, N. A. D., and Pyle, J. A.: Implementation of the Fast-JX Photolysis scheme (v6.4) into the UKCA component of the MetUM chemistry-climate model (v7.3), Geosci. Model Dev., 6, 161-177, doi:10.5194/gmd-6-161-2013, 2013.

Photolysis Reaction Definition

The photolysis reactions are defined in the ukca_chem_master.F90 module using the ratj_t1 Fortran type specification and held in the ratj_defs_master array.

To format of this ratj_t1 type is

ratj_t1(N,'Reactant 1','Reactant 2','Product 1 ','Product 2 ','Product 3 ',&
'Product 4 ', Fraction of Product 1 produced, Fraction of Product 2 produced, Fraction of Product 3 produced, 
Fraction of Product 4 produced, Quantum Yield, Look-up Label,SCHEME,QUALIFIER,DISQUALIFIER,VN), & 

The Look-Up Label is used to define the file used for the 2D photolysis, and is used by Fast-JX to find the correct values for each species in the input data files. This is a 10-character string, although only the first 7 characters are read by Fast-JX. Reactant 2 will always be PHOTON.

The settings for N, SCHEME, QUALIFIER, DISQUALIFIER, and VN are the same as in the adding new tracers tutorial, although here N should be incremented for each new reaction, where there might be the same reaction specified several times with changes to reaction rates or even species.

Examples of this type are

! 3
! This should produce H+ CHO -> H + HO2 + CO in ST scheme.
ratj_t1(3,'HCHO      ','PHOTON    ','HO2       ','HO2       ','CO        ',&
     '          ', 0.0,0.0,0.0,0.0, 100.000,'jhchoa    ',TI+T+ST+R,0,0,107) ,&
ratj_t1(3,'HCHO      ','PHOTON    ','H         ','CO        ','HO2       ',&
     '          ', 0.0,0.0,0.0,0.0, 100.000,'jhchoa    ',S,0,0,107) ,&
! 4
ratj_t1(4,'HCHO      ','PHOTON    ','H2        ','CO        ','          ',&
     '          ', 0.0,0.0,0.0,0.0, 100.000,'jhchob    ',TI+S+T+ST+R,0,0,107) ,&

Solution to Task 6.1: Add a bimolecular reaction

Surface level concentrations (kg/kg) of BOB after the reaction has been applied.

You were given the task

  • You should now add in the bimolecular reaction of ALICE with OH to form BOB and a secondary organic compound (labelled in UKCA as Sec_Org). This reaction is given by:

Parameter Value
2.70E-11
0.00
-390.00

For a working Rose suite that has completed this task, please see

  • ARCHER: u-as292@60067
  • vm: u-as297@59986

The specific Rose changes made are:

The specific Rose changes made are:

ARCHER:

Index: app/fcm_make/rose-app.conf
===================================================================
--- app/fcm_make/rose-app.conf	(revision 59937)
+++ app/fcm_make/rose-app.conf	(revision 60067)
@@ -42,4 +42,4 @@
 stash_version=1A
 timer_version=3A
 um_rev=vn10.9
-um_sources=branches/dev/lukeabraham/vn10.9_UKCA_Tutorial_Solns@46574
+um_sources=branches/dev/lukeabraham/vn10.9_UKCA_Tutorial_Solns@46619

These differences can be found in the file /home/ukca/Tutorial/vn10.9/worked_solutions/Task6.1/Task6.1_rose.patch on PUMA.

vm:

Index: app/fcm_make/rose-app.conf
===================================================================
--- app/fcm_make/rose-app.conf	(revision 59931)
+++ app/fcm_make/rose-app.conf	(revision 59986)
@@ -42,4 +42,4 @@
 stash_version=1A
 timer_version=3A
 um_rev=vn10.9
-um_sources=branches/dev/lukeabraham/vn10.9_UKCA_Tutorial_Solns@46574
+um_sources=branches/dev/lukeabraham/vn10.9_UKCA_Tutorial_Solns@46619

The specific UM changes made are:

Index: src/atmosphere/UKCA/ukca_chem_master.F90
===================================================================
--- src/atmosphere/UKCA/ukca_chem_master.F90	(revision 46574)
+++ src/atmosphere/UKCA/ukca_chem_master.F90	(revision 46619)
@@ -83,7 +83,7 @@
 INTEGER, PARAMETER :: n_het_master  =  10 ! number of heterogeneous reactions
 INTEGER, PARAMETER :: n_dry_master  =  57 ! number of dry deposition reactions
 INTEGER, PARAMETER :: n_wet_master  =  49 ! number of wet deposition reactions
-INTEGER, PARAMETER :: n_bimol_master= 400 ! number of bimolecular reactions
+INTEGER, PARAMETER :: n_bimol_master= 401 ! number of bimolecular reactions
 INTEGER, PARAMETER :: n_ratj_master =  76 ! number of photolysis reactions
 INTEGER, PARAMETER :: n_ratt_master =  49 ! number of termolecular reactions
 
@@ -2152,7 +2152,9 @@
 ratb_t1(276,'MACRO2    ','MeOO      ','MGLY      ','HACET     ','MeCO3     ',& 
 'HCHO      ',1.00e-12,  0.00,    0.00, 1.00, 0.75, 0.25, 2.75, TI,0,0,107),&
 ratb_t1(277,'MACRO2    ','MeOO      ','HO2       ','CO        ','          ',& 
-'          ',1.00e-12,  0.00,    0.00, 1.17, 0.25, 0.00, 0.00, TI,0,0,107) /)
+'          ',1.00e-12,  0.00,    0.00, 1.17, 0.25, 0.00, 0.00, TI,0,0,107),&
+ratb_t1(278,'ALICE     ','OH        ','BOB       ','Sec_Org   ','          ',& 
+'          ',2.70E-11,  0.00, -390.00, 0.00, 0.00, 0.00, 0.00, ST,0,0,107) /)
 
 !----------------------------------------------------------------------
 ! NOTES: CheST Bimolecular Reactions

These differences can be found in the file /home/ukca/Tutorial/vn10.9/worked_solutions/Task6.1/Task6.1_code.patch on PUMA.

Sample output from this task can be found at /work/n02/n02/ukca/Tutorial/vn10.9/sample_output/Task6.1/atmosa.pa19810901_00 on ARCHER.

Checklist

Add the new reaction into the correct reaction type array in ukca_chem_master.F90, incrementing the size of the array accordingly.
If required, add special code to the asad_bimol.F90, asad_trimol.F90, ukca_hetero_mod.F90, or asad_hetero.F90 routines.
For photolysis reactions, further work is required to calculate new cross sections. Code will also need to be added to ukca_strat_update.F90.

Tutorial 7


Written by Luke Abraham 2017