Researchers used data taken in March 2023 by an
airborne imaging spectrometer to map ammonia emissions in the Imperial Valley.
Produced by agricultural activities as well as geothermal processes, ammonia is
a precursor to particulate matter, which can cause adverse health outcomes when
inhaled.
The pungent gas contributes to fine airborne particulate pollution, which
endangers human health when inhaled and absorbed in the bloodstream.
A recent study led by scientists at
NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California and the nonprofit
Aerospace Corporation shows how high-resolution maps of ground-level ammonia
plumes can be generated with airborne sensors, highlighting a way to better
track the gas. A key chemical ingredient of fine particulate matter — tiny
particles in the air known to be harmful when inhaled — ammonia can be released
through agricultural activities such as livestock farming and geothermal power
generation as well as natural geothermal processes. Because it’s not
systematically monitored, many sources of the pungent gas go
undetected.
Published in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics in October, the study focuses on
a series of 2023 research flights that covered the Imperial Valley to the
southeast of the Salton Sea in inland Southern California, as well as the
Eastern Coachella Valley to its northwest. Prior satellite-based research has identified the Imperial Valley as a prolific
source of gaseous ammonia. In the study, scientists employed an airborne sensor
capable of resolving ammonia plumes with enough detail to track their origins:
Aerospace Corporation’s Mako instrument is an imaging spectrometer that
observes long-wave infrared light emitted by areas of Earth’s surface and
atmosphere 6 feet (2 meters) across.
Using the instrument, which can
detect ammonia’s chemical signature by the infrared light it absorbs, the
authors found elevated levels of the gas near several sources, including
agricultural fields, livestock feedlots, geothermal plants, and geothermal vents.
Measurements in parts of the Imperial Valley were 2½ to eight times higher than
in Coachella Valley’s Mecca community, which had ammonia concentrations closer
to background levels.
Though not toxic on its own in low
concentrations, ammonia is a precursor to particulate matter, also known as
aerosol or particle pollution. It reacts with other gases to form solid
ammonium salt particles small enough to penetrate the bloodstream from the
lungs. Particles under 2.5 micrometers in diameter — also known as PM2.5 — are
associated with elevated rates of asthma, lung cancer, and cardiovascular
disease, among other negative health outcomes.
“Historically, more attention has
focused on primary sources of PM2.5, such as auto emissions. But with
significant reductions in those emissions and increasingly stringent air
quality standards, there is growing interest in understanding secondary sources
that form particles in the air from precursor gases,” said Sina Hasheminassab,
lead author of the paper and a research scientist at JPL. “As an important
precursor to PM2.5, ammonia plays a key role, but its emissions are poorly
characterized and undermonitored.”
Rising ammonia
Previous satellite-based studies
have shown rising levels of atmospheric ammonia, both globally and in the continental United States. That research revealed broad
trends, but with spatial resolution on the order of tens of miles, the
measurements were only sufficient to identify variation over areas of hundreds
of square miles or more.
The chemical behavior of ammonia
also poses a particular monitoring challenge: Once emitted, it only stays in
the atmosphere for hours before reacting with other compounds. In contrast,
carbon dioxide can remain in the air for centuries.
Planes and satellites can provide
an overview of sources and the geographic distribution of emissions at a given
moment. Although satellites offer wider and more recurrent coverage, airborne
instruments, being closer to the source, produce higher-resolution data and can
focus on specific locations at designated times.
Those proved to be the right
capabilities for the recent study. Researchers flew Mako over the Imperial and
Eastern Coachella valleys on the mornings and afternoons of March 28 and Sept.
25, 2023, and took concurrent measurements on the ground with both a fixed
monitoring station in Mecca operated by the South Coast Air Quality Management
District (AQMD) and a mobile spectrometer developed at the University of
California, Riverside.
“The goal was to show that this
technique was capable of delivering data with the required accuracy that
aerosol scientists and potentially even air quality regulatory bodies could use
to improve the air quality in those regions,” said David Tratt, a senior
scientist at Aerospace Corporation and coauthor of the paper. “We ended up with
maps that identify multiple sources of ammonia, and we were able to track the
plumes from their sources and observe them coalescing into larger
clouds.”
Distinct plumes
During the flights, the team
collected data over the southeastern coast of the Salton Sea, which straddles
Riverside and Imperial counties. There, Mako revealed small plumes coming from
geothermal fumaroles venting superheated water and steam that react with
nitrogen-bearing compounds in the soil, releasing ammonia.
Farther to the southeast, the
results showed several geothermal power plants emitting ammonia, primarily from
their cooling towers, as part of their normal operations.
Farther southeast still, the
researchers spotted ammonia emissions, a byproduct of animal waste, from cattle
farms in the Imperial Valley. During the March 28 flight, a plume from the
largest facility in the study area measured up to 1.7 miles (2.8 kilometers)
wide and extended up to 4.8 miles (7.7 kilometers) downwind of the source.
‘Very large puzzle’
As part of the study, AQMD’s Mecca
monitoring station recorded seasonal changes in ammonia concentrations. Given
the few sources in the area, the researchers surmised that winds during certain
months tend to blow the gas from Imperial Valley to the Coachella Valley.
The study underscores the benefits
of detailed spatial information about ammonia emissions, and it partly informed
the agency’s decision in July to expand its ammonia-monitoring network and
extend the life of the Mecca station.
As a precursor to PM2.5, ammonia is
“one piece of a very large puzzle” that, for Coachella Valley residents,
includes vehicle emissions, desert dust, and agricultural activities, said
Payam Pakbin, manager of the Advanced Monitoring Technologies Unit at AQMD and
a paper coauthor.
“These communities want to know the contributions of these sources to the air quality they’re experiencing,” he added. “Findings like these help our agency better prioritize which sources require the most attention and ultimately guide our focus toward those that are the highest priority for achieving emission reductions in this community.”
Source: NASA, Aerospace Corporation Study Sharpens Focus on Ammonia Emissions - NASA

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