The Operational Priority Substances model
This report describes in detail, OPS-Pro 4.1, the latest version of the Operational Priority Substances (OPS) model. OPS is a model that simulates the atmospheric process sequence of emission, dispersion, transport, chemical conversion and finally deposition.
The model is set up as a universal framework supporting the modelling of a wide variety of pollutants including fine particles but the main purpose is to calculate the deposition of acidifying compounds over the Netherlands at a high spatial resolution. Previous versions of the model have been used since 1989 for all the atmospheric transport and deposition calculations in the State of the Environment reports and Environmental Outlook studies in the Netherlands.
An extensive model validation exercise was carried out using observations from the National Air Quality Monitoring Network over the past twenty years. Good agreement was found for both SOx and NOy species in the spatial patterns, just as in trends over the past ten years. An exception is formed by the NHx species, which are, in general, underestimated by approximately 25%. This discrepancy has for some time been known as the 'ammonia gap'. The total uncertainty for deposition to a nationally distributed ecosystem is estimated at 20%, 25 and 30% for SOx, NOy and NHx, respectively. For a specific ecosystem (size: 500 × 500m to 5000 × 5000m), the uncertainties will be much higher: 50, 60, 100% for SOx, NOy and NHx deposition, respectively. Included in these figures are the uncertainties in current emission estimates. Uncertainties in dry deposition velocities dominate the total uncertainty.
Authors
Specifications
- Publication title
- The Operational Priority Substances model
- Publication date
- 17 December 2004
- Publication type
- Publication
- Publication language
- English
- Product number
- 91367