Abstract. Tropospheric ozone (O3) production from wildfires is highly uncertain; previous studies have identified both production and loss of O3 in fire-influenced air masses. To capture the total ozone production attributable to a smoke plume, we bridge the gap between near-field fire chemistry and aged smoke in the remote troposphere. Using airborne measurements from several campaigns, we find that fire-ozone production increases with age, with a regime transition from NOx-saturated to NOx-limited conditions, showing that O3 production in aged plumes is controlled by nitrogen oxides (NOx). Observations in fresh smoke show that suppressed photochemistry reduces O3 production by ~70% in units of ppb Ox per ppm CO. Anthropogenic NOx injection into VOC-rich fire plumes drives additional O3 production, exceeding 50 ppb above background in extreme cases. Using a box model, we explore the sensitivity of O3 production to fire emissions and chemical parameters, demonstrating the importance of aerosol-induced photochemical suppression over heterogeneous HO₂ uptake, validating HONO's role as an oxidant precursor, and confirming evolving NOx sensitivity. We evaluate GEOS-Chem's performance against these observations, finding that the model captures fire-induced O3 enhancements at older ages but overestimates near-field enhancements, fails to capture fire emission magnitude and variability, and misses the chemical regime transition. These discrepancies bias normalized ozone production (∆O3/∆CO) across plume lifetime. GEOS-Chem attributes 2.4% of the global tropospheric ozone burden and 3.1% of surface ozone concentrations to fire emissions in 2020, with stronger impacts in regions of frequent burning.
Joseph Palmo, Colette L. Heald, Donald R Blake, Ilann Bourgeois, Matthew M. Coggon, Jeffrey L. Collett, F. Flocke, Alan Fried, Georgios I. Gkatzelis, Samuel R. Hall, Lu Hu, J. L. Jiménez, Pedro Campuzano‐Jost, I‐Ting Ku, Benjamin A. Nault, Brett B. Palm, Jeff Peischl, I. B. Pollack, Amy P. Sullivan, Joel A. Thornton, Carsten Warneke, Armin Wisthaler, Lu Xu
M. J. Alvarado, Jennifer A. Logan, Jingqiu Mao, Eric C. Apel, D. D. Riemer, Donald R Blake, R. C. Cohen, K.‐E. Min, A. E. Perring, E. C. Browne, P. J. Wooldridge, Glenn S. Diskin, G. W. Sachse, Henry E. Fuelberg, W. R. Sessions, D. L. Harrigan, G. Huey, J. Liao, A. Case-Hanks, J. L. Jiménez, M. J. Cubison, S. A. Vay,
M. J. Alvarado, Jennifer A. Logan, Jingqiu Mao, Eric C. Apel, D. D. Riemer, Donald R Blake, R. C. Cohen, K.‐E. Min, A. E. Perring, E. C. Browne, P. J. Wooldridge, Glenn S. Diskin, G. W. Sachse, Henry E. Fuelberg, W. R. Sessions, D. L. Harrigan, G. Huey, J. Liao, A. Case-Hanks, J. L. Jiménez, M. J. Cubison, S. A. Vay,
Xin Chen, Dylan B. Millet, J. A. Neuman, Patrick R. Veres, Eric Ray, R. Commane, Bruce C. Daube, Kathryn McKain, Joshua P. Schwarz, Joseph M. Katich, K. D. Froyd, Gregory P. Schill, Michelle Kim, John D. Crounse, Hannah M. Allen, Eric C. Apel, Rebecca S. Hornbrook, Donald R Blake, Benjamin A. Nault, Pedro Campuzano‐Jost, J. L. Jiménez, Jack E. Dibb
Young Ro Lee, L. G. Huey, David J. Tanner, Masayuki Takeuchi, Hang Qu, Xiaoxi Liu, N. L. Ng, J. H. Crawford, Alan Fried, Dirk Richter, Isobel J. Simpson, Donald R Blake, N. J. Blake, Simone Meinardi, Saewung Kim, Glenn S. Diskin, Joshua P. DiGangi, Yonghoon Choi, Sally E. Pusede, P. O. Wennberg, Michelle Kim, John D. Crounse, Alex P. Teng,
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