Articles | Volume 15, issue 10
https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-15-4077-2022
https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-15-4077-2022
Development and technical paper
 | 
25 May 2022
Development and technical paper |  | 25 May 2022

Effects of vertical ship exhaust plume distributions on urban pollutant concentration – a sensitivity study with MITRAS v2.0 and EPISODE-CityChem v1.4

Ronny Badeke, Volker Matthias, Matthias Karl, and David Grawe

Viewed

Total article views: 3,151 (including HTML, PDF, and XML)
HTML PDF XML Total Supplement BibTeX EndNote
2,210 837 104 3,151 160 80 172
  • HTML: 2,210
  • PDF: 837
  • XML: 104
  • Total: 3,151
  • Supplement: 160
  • BibTeX: 80
  • EndNote: 172
Views and downloads (calculated since 31 Jan 2022)
Cumulative views and downloads (calculated since 31 Jan 2022)

Viewed (geographical distribution)

Total article views: 3,151 (including HTML, PDF, and XML) Thereof 3,014 with geography defined and 137 with unknown origin.
Country # Views %
  • 1
1
 
 
 
 
Latest update: 17 Apr 2026
Download
Short summary
For air quality modeling studies, it is very important to distribute pollutants correctly into the model system. This has not yet been done for shipping pollution in great detail. We studied the effects of different vertical distributions of shipping pollutants on the urban air quality and derived advanced formulas for it. These formulas take weather conditions and ship-specific parameters like the exhaust gas temperature into account.
Share