TY - GEN AU - Johannes Flemming AU - V. Huijnen AU - J. Arteta AU - Peter Bechtold AU - Anton Beljaars AU - A-M. Blechschmidt AU - Michail Diamantakis AU - Richard Engelen AU - A. Gaude AU - Antje Inness AU - Luke Jones AU - V.-H. Peuch AU - M.G. Schulz AU - O. Stein AU - A. Tsikerdekis AB - A representation of atmospheric chemistry has been included in the Integrated Forecasting System (IFS) of the European Centre for Medium-range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF). The new chemistry modules complement the aerosol module of the IFS for atmospheric Composition, which is named C-IFS. C-IFS for chemistry supersedes a coupled system, in which the chemical transport model MOZART 3 was two-way coupled to the IFS (IFS-MOZART). This paper contains a description of the new on-line implementation, an evaluation with observations and a comparison of the performance of C-IFS with IFS-MOZART. The chemical mechanism of C-IFS is an extended version of the CB05 chemical mechanism as implemented TM5 model and a parameterization for stratospheric ozone. CB05 describes tropospheric chemistry with 54 species and 126 reactions. Wet deposition and lightning NO emissions are modelled in C-IFS using the detailed input of the IFS physics package. A one-year simulation for 2008 at a horizontal resolution of about 80 km is evaluated against ozone sondes, CO MOZAIC profiles, surface observations of ozone, CO, SO2 and NO2 as well as satellite retrievals of CO, tropospheric NO2 and formaldehyde. MACCity anthropogenic emissions and biomass burning emissions from the GFAS data set were used in the simulation. C-IFS (CB05) showed an improved performance with respect to MOZART for CO, SO2 and upper tropospheric ozone and was of a similar accuracy for the other evaluated species. C-IFS (CB05) is about ten times more computationally efficient than IFS-MOZART. BT - ECMWF Technical Memoranda DA - 09/2014 DO - 10.21957/kkljbmrkh LA - eng M1 - 730 N2 - A representation of atmospheric chemistry has been included in the Integrated Forecasting System (IFS) of the European Centre for Medium-range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF). The new chemistry modules complement the aerosol module of the IFS for atmospheric Composition, which is named C-IFS. C-IFS for chemistry supersedes a coupled system, in which the chemical transport model MOZART 3 was two-way coupled to the IFS (IFS-MOZART). This paper contains a description of the new on-line implementation, an evaluation with observations and a comparison of the performance of C-IFS with IFS-MOZART. The chemical mechanism of C-IFS is an extended version of the CB05 chemical mechanism as implemented TM5 model and a parameterization for stratospheric ozone. CB05 describes tropospheric chemistry with 54 species and 126 reactions. Wet deposition and lightning NO emissions are modelled in C-IFS using the detailed input of the IFS physics package. A one-year simulation for 2008 at a horizontal resolution of about 80 km is evaluated against ozone sondes, CO MOZAIC profiles, surface observations of ozone, CO, SO2 and NO2 as well as satellite retrievals of CO, tropospheric NO2 and formaldehyde. MACCity anthropogenic emissions and biomass burning emissions from the GFAS data set were used in the simulation. C-IFS (CB05) showed an improved performance with respect to MOZART for CO, SO2 and upper tropospheric ozone and was of a similar accuracy for the other evaluated species. C-IFS (CB05) is about ten times more computationally efficient than IFS-MOZART. PB - ECMWF PY - 2014 T2 - ECMWF Technical Memoranda TI - Tropospheric Chemistry in the Integrated Forecasting System of ECMWF UR - https://www.ecmwf.int/node/9426 ER -