Tracer transport in deep convective updrafts: Plume ensemble versus bulk formulations

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Abstract

Two widely used approaches for parameterizing tracer transport based on convective mass fluxes are the plume ensemble formulation (PEF) and the bulk formulation (BF). Here the behavior of these two is contrasted for the specific case in which the BF airmass fluxes are derived as a direct simplification of an explicit PEF. Relative to the PEF, the BF has a greater rate of entrainment of midtropospheric air into the parcels that reach the highest altitudes, and thus is expected to compute less efficient transport of surface-layer tracers to the upper troposphere. In this study, this difference is quantified using a new algorithm for computing mass conserving, monotonic tracer transport for both the BF and PEF, along with a technique for decomposing a bulk mass flux profile into a set of consistent, discrete plumes for use in the PEF. Runs with a 3D global chemistry transport model (MATCH) show that the BF is likely to be an adequate approximation for most tracers with lifetimes of a week or longer. However, for short-lived tracers (lifetimes of a couple days or less) the BF results in significantly less efficient transport to the upper troposphere than the PEF, with differences exceeding 30% on a monthly zonal mean basis. Implications of these results for tropospheric chemistry are discussed. © 2005 American Meteorological Society.

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Lawrence, M. G., & Rasch, P. J. (2005). Tracer transport in deep convective updrafts: Plume ensemble versus bulk formulations. Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 62(8), 2880–2894. https://doi.org/10.1175/JAS3505.1

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