3 research outputs found

    Isoprene oxidation mechanisms: Measurements and modelling of OH and HO[subscript 2] over a South-East Asian tropical rainforest during the OP3 field campaign

    Full text link
    Forests are the dominant source of volatile organic compounds into the atmosphere, with isoprene being the most significant species. The oxidation chemistry of these compounds is a significant driver of local, regional and global atmospheric composition. Observations made over Borneo during the OP3 project in 2008, together with an observationally constrained box model are used to assess our understanding of this oxidation chemistry. In line with previous work in tropical forests, we find that the standard model based on MCM chemistry significantly underestimates the observed OH concentrations. Geometric mean observed to modelled ratios of OH and HO[subscript 2] in airmasses impacted with isoprene are 5.32[subscript −4.43,superscript +3.68] and 1.18[subscript −0.30,superscript +0.30] respectively, with 68 % of the observations being within the specified variation. We implement a variety of mechanistic changes into the model, including epoxide formation and unimolecular decomposition of isoprene peroxy radicals, and assess their impact on the model success. We conclude that none of the current suggestions can simultaneously remove the bias from both OH and HO[subscript 2] simulations and believe that detailed laboratory studies are now needed to resolve this issue

    Hydrogen oxide photochemistry in the northern Canadian spring time boundary layer

    Full text link
    [1] Measurements of OH and HO2 concentrations were made at the surface of the eastern coast of the Hudson Bay during the COBRA campaign from February 18th to March 8th 2008. Diurnally averaged OH and HO2 concentrations peaked at 1.16 (±1.02) × 106 molecule cm−3 and 1.42 (±0.64) × 108 molecule cm−3 respectively. A box-model, constrained to supporting observations, is used to access the radical budget in this cold, northerly environment. Formaldehyde (HCHO) photolysis is found to be the dominant daytime radical source, providing 74% of the observed HOx. A considerable (>80% of the total source) surface HCHO source is required to reconcile the model and observed HCHO concentrations. Model simulations also suggest significant roles for the heterogeneous loss of HO2 and for halogen chemistry in the cycling of HO2 to OH. The formation of HO2NO2 is identified as an important radical reservoir, reducing HOx concentrations during the day and enhancing them at night. This impacts both local oxidizing capacity and reduces local ozone production by approximately 30%. The sensitivity of the local chemistry to uncertainties in these processes is explored. The majority of these processes are not currently represented in global chemistry models

    HO[subscript x] observations over West Africa during AMMA: impact of isoprene and NO[subscript x]

    Full text link
    Aircraft OH and HO[subscript 2] measurements made over West Africa during the AMMA field campaign in summer 2006 have been investigated using a box model constrained to observations of long-lived species and physical parameters. "Good" agreement was found for HO[subscript 2] (modelled to observed gradient of 1.23 ± 0.11). However, the model significantly overpredicts OH concentrations. The reasons for this are not clear, but may reflect instrumental instabilities affecting the OH measurements. Within the model, HO[subscript x] concentrations in West Africa are controlled by relatively simple photochemistry, with production dominated by ozone photolysis and reaction of O([superscript 1]D) with water vapour, and loss processes dominated by HO[subscript 2] + HO[subscript 2] and HO[subscript 2] + RO[subscript 2]. Isoprene chemistry was found to influence forested regions. In contrast to several recent field studies in very low NO[subscript x] and high isoprene environments, we do not observe any dependence of model success for HO[subscript 2] on isoprene and attribute this to efficient recycling of HO[subscript x] through RO[subscript 2] + NO reactions under the moderate NO[subscript x] concentrations (5–300 ppt NO in the boundary layer, median 76 ppt) encountered during AMMA. This suggests that some of the problems with understanding the impact of isoprene on atmospheric composition may be limited to the extreme low range of NO[subscript x] concentrations
    corecore