TY - JOUR
T1 - The Bolzano Tracer Experiment (BTEX)
AU - Zardi, Dino
AU - Falocchi, Marco
AU - Giovannini, Lorenzo
AU - Tirler, Werner
AU - Tomasi, Elena
AU - Antonacci, Gianluca
AU - FERRERO, Enrico
AU - Alessandrini, Stefano
AU - Jimenez, Pedro A.
AU - Kosovic, Branko
AU - Delle Monache, Luca
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Author(s) 2020.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - The paper describes the observational and modeling efforts performed under the
Bolzano Tracer Experiment (BTEX). BTEX focused on the basin surrounding the city of Bolzano, at
the junction of three tributary valleys on the southern side of the Alps, to characterize the ground-
level impact of pollutants emitted by a waste incinerator close to the city, and atmospheric factors
controlling dispersion processes in the whole basin, under different winter weather situations. As
part of the experiment, two controlled releases of a passive gas tracer (sulfur hexafluoride, SF6 )
were performed through the stack of the incinerator on 14 February 2017 at two different times,
starting respectively at 0700 and 1245 LST, representative of distinct phases of the daily cycle.
Samples of ambient air were collected at target sites, and later analyzed using a mass spectrometer,
allowing a detectability limit down to 30 ppt. Meanwhile, meteorological conditions were con-
tinuously monitored by means of a high-resolution, nonconventional network of ground-based
instruments, including 15 weather stations, one temperature profiler, one sodar, and one Doppler
wind lidar. Data from the above measurements represent one of the rare examples of integrated
datasets available to the community for the characterization of dispersion processes in a typical
mountainous environment. In particular, they offered a reference benchmark for testing and
calibrating a series of combined numerical modeling suites for weather prediction and pollutant
dispersion simulation in such a complex terrain, as shown in the paper.
AB - The paper describes the observational and modeling efforts performed under the
Bolzano Tracer Experiment (BTEX). BTEX focused on the basin surrounding the city of Bolzano, at
the junction of three tributary valleys on the southern side of the Alps, to characterize the ground-
level impact of pollutants emitted by a waste incinerator close to the city, and atmospheric factors
controlling dispersion processes in the whole basin, under different winter weather situations. As
part of the experiment, two controlled releases of a passive gas tracer (sulfur hexafluoride, SF6 )
were performed through the stack of the incinerator on 14 February 2017 at two different times,
starting respectively at 0700 and 1245 LST, representative of distinct phases of the daily cycle.
Samples of ambient air were collected at target sites, and later analyzed using a mass spectrometer,
allowing a detectability limit down to 30 ppt. Meanwhile, meteorological conditions were con-
tinuously monitored by means of a high-resolution, nonconventional network of ground-based
instruments, including 15 weather stations, one temperature profiler, one sodar, and one Doppler
wind lidar. Data from the above measurements represent one of the rare examples of integrated
datasets available to the community for the characterization of dispersion processes in a typical
mountainous environment. In particular, they offered a reference benchmark for testing and
calibrating a series of combined numerical modeling suites for weather prediction and pollutant
dispersion simulation in such a complex terrain, as shown in the paper.
KW - Air pollution
KW - Complex terrain
KW - Dispersion
KW - Lidars/Lidar observations
KW - Mesoscale processes
KW - Tracers
KW - Air pollution
KW - Complex terrain
KW - Dispersion
KW - Lidars/Lidar observations
KW - Mesoscale processes
KW - Tracers
UR - https://iris.uniupo.it/handle/11579/125973
U2 - 10.1175/BAMS-D-19-0024.1
DO - 10.1175/BAMS-D-19-0024.1
M3 - Article
SN - 0003-0007
SP - 1
EP - 66
JO - Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
JF - Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
ER -