Data is not provided for this entry as it was developed by an external institution. It is available from Dr. Manish Shrivastava upon request (ManishKumar.Shrivastava@pnnl.gov).
Data used to support the analysis and conclusions in the study include (1) output from the WRF-CHEM regional-scale chemical transport model and (2) measurements from the Department of Energy Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) facility in Southern Great Plains, Oklahoma. Portions of this dataset are inaccessible because: This data is too large, and is maintained by the external lead author's laboratory. They can be accessed through the following means: Interested parties should contact Dr. Manish Shrivastava at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Washington (ManishKumar.Shrivastava@pnnl.gov). Please request the data supporting the article "Anthropogenic extremely low volatility organics (ELVOCs) Govern the Growth of Molecular Clusters over the Southern Great Plains during the Springtime". Format: The data generated by this research study are in large binary file formats (> 100 GBs) and not appropriate for sharing via ScienceHub. They are available to interested parties via communication with the corresponding author.
This dataset is associated with the following publication:
Shrivastava, M., J. Zhang, R. Zaveri, B. Zhao, J. Pierce, S. O'Donnell, J. Fast, B. Gaudet, J. Shilling, A. Zelenyuk, B. Murphy, H. Pye, Q. Zhang, J. Trousdell, R. Zhang, Y. Li, and Q. Chen. Anthropogenic extremely low volatility organics (ELVOCs) Govern the Growth of Molecular Clusters over the Southern Great Plains during the Springtime. JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH: ATMOSPHERES. American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, USA, 129(21): e2024JD041212, (2024).