Understanding the efficiency and variability of photochemical ozone (O 3 ) production from western wildfire plumes is important to accurately estimate their influence on North American air quality. A set of photochemical measurements were made from the NOAA Twin Otter research aircraft as a part of the Fire Influence on Regional to Global Environments and Air Quality (FIREX-AQ) experiment. We use a zero-dimensional (0-D) box model to investigate the chemistry driving O 3 production in modeled plumes. Modeled afternoon plumes reached a maximum O 3 mixing ratio of 140 ± 50 ppbv (average ± standard deviation) within 20 ± 10 min of emission compared to 76 ± 12 ppbv in 60 ± 30 min in evening plumes. Afternoon and evening maximum O 3 isopleths indicate that plumes were near their peak in NO x efficiency. A radical budget describes the NO x volatile -organic compound (VOC) sensitivities of these plumes. Afternoon plumes displayed a rapid transition from VOC-sensitive to NO x -sensitive chemistry, driven by HO x (=OH + HO 2 ) production from photolysis of nitrous acid (HONO) (48 ± 20% of primary HO x ) and formaldehyde (HCHO) (26 ± 9%) emitted directly from the fire. Evening plumes exhibit a slower transition from peak NO x efficiency to VOC-sensitive O 3 production caused by a reduction in photolysis rates and fire emissions. HO x production in evening plumes is controlled by HONO photolysis (53 ± 7%), HCHO photolysis (18 ± 9%), and alkene ozonolysis (17 ± 9%).
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