http://www.aaqr.org/files/article/265/9_AAQR-15-05-OA-0318_1206-1221.pdf
WRF-Chem was developed at NOAA/ESRL (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration/Earth System Research Laboratory). Detailed descriptions of the model
were given in Grell et al. (2005). Fast et al. (2006) updated WRF-Chem by incorporating complex gas-phase chemistry, aerosol treatments, and photolysis scheme. The air quality
component of WRF-Chem is fully consistent with the meteorological component; both components use the same transport scheme (mass and scalar preserving), the same
horizontal and vertical grids, the same physical schemes for subgrid-scale transport, and the same time step for transport and vertical mixing. There are several different chemistry, aerosol and photolysis schemes to choose from in WRF-Chem (Grell et al., 2005; Fast et al., 2006)
@article{fast2006evolution,
title={Evolution of ozone, particulates, and aerosol direct radiative forcing in the vicinity of Houston using a fully coupled meteorology-chemistry-aerosol model},
author={Fast, Jerome D and Gustafson Jr, William I and Easter, Richard C and Zaveri, Rahul A and Barnard, James C and Chapman, Elaine G and Grell, Georg A and Peckham, Steven E},
journal={Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres},
volume={111},
number={D21},
year={2006},
publisher={Wiley Online Library}
}
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