22 research outputs found
Extreme deuterium enrichment in stratospheric hydrogen and the global atmospheric budget of H_2
Molecular hydrogen (H_2) is the second most abundant trace gas in the atmosphere after methane (CH_4). In the troposphere, the D/H ratio of H_2 is enriched by 120â° relative to the world's oceans. This cannot be explained by the sources of H_2 for which the D/H ratio has been measured to date (for example, fossil fuels and biomass burning). But the isotopic composition of H_2 from its single largest sourceâthe photochemical oxidation of methaneâhas yet to be determined. Here we show that the D/H ratio of stratospheric H2 develops enrichments greater than 440â°, the most extreme D/H enrichment observed in a terrestrial material. We estimate the D/H ratio of H_2 produced from CH_4 in the stratosphere, where production is isolated from the influences of non-photochemical sources and sinks, showing that the chain of reactions producing H_2 from CH_4 concentrates D in the product H_2. This enrichment, which we estimate is similar on a global average in the troposphere, contributes substantially to the D/H ratio of tropospheric H_2
Large and unexpected enrichment in stratospheric ^(16)O^(13)C^(18)O and its meridional variation
The stratospheric CO_2 oxygen isotope budget is thought to be governed primarily by the O(1D)+CO_2 isotope exchange reaction. However, there is increasing evidence that other important physical processes may be occurring that standard isotopic tools have been unable to identify. Measuring the distribution of the exceedingly rare CO_2 isotopologue ^(16)O^(13)C^(18)O, in concert with ^(18)O and ^(17)O abundances, provides sensitivities to these additional processes and, thus, is a valuable test of current models. We identify a large and unexpected meridional variation in stratospheric 16O13C18O, observed as proportions in the polar vortex that are higher than in any naturally derived CO_2 sample to date. We show, through photochemical experiments, that lower ^(16)O^(13)C^(18)O proportions observed in the midlatitudes are determined primarily by the O(1D)+CO_2 isotope exchange reaction, which promotes a stochastic isotopologue distribution. In contrast, higher ^(16)O^(13)C^(18)O proportions in the polar vortex show correlations with long-lived stratospheric tracer and bulk isotope abundances opposite to those observed at midlatitudes and, thus, opposite to those easily explained by O(1D)+CO_2. We believe the most plausible explanation for this meridional variation is either an unrecognized isotopic fractionation associated with the mesospheric photochemistry of CO_2 or temperature-dependent isotopic exchange on polar stratospheric clouds. Unraveling the ultimate source of stratospheric ^(16)O^(13)C^(18)O enrichments may impose additional isotopic constraints on biosphereâatmosphere carbon exchange, biosphere productivity, and their respective responses to climate change
CAM6-chem with very short-lived halogen chemistry: evaluation with the whole air sampler aircraft data from multiple seasons and locations
A new version of the Community Atmosphere Model with chemistry (CAM6-chem) has recently been released to the atmospheric science community (June 2018). CAM6-chem has updated boundary layer processes, shallow convection and liquid cloud macrophysics, and two-moment cloud microphysics with prognostic cloud mass andconcentration. A 4-mode prognostic aerosol representation (MAM4) has been added that includes a representation of dust, sea-salt black carbon, organic carbon, and sulfate in three size categories (Gettelman et al., 2019). CAM6-Chem has a detailed representation of both tropospheric and stratospheric chemistry. The tropospheric chemistry includes updates to the representation the organic nitrates, isoprene oxidization, and the speciation of the aromaticand terpenes (Emmons et al., 2019). This mechanism also includes a comprehensive secondary organic aerosol parameterization based on the Volatility Basic Set (VBS) model framework (Hodzic et al. 2016; Tilmes et al., 2019). The stratospheric halogen chemistry represents the distribution of CH3Cl, CFCs, HCFCs, CH3Br, and halons (Kinnison et al., 2007). For this study, the emissions, wet and dry depositions, and chemical processes that represent Very Short-Lived Halogens (VSLH) were added (e.g., Saiz-Lopez et al., 2016). Evaluation of the organic VSLH distributions are to compare with trace gas measurements collected during seven field campaigns, two withmultiple deployments, to evaluate the model performance over multiple years. The campaigns include HIPPO (2009-2011) pole to pole observations in the Pacific on the NSF/NCAR GV over multiple seasons; SEAC4RS (Aug./Sept., 2013) in the central and southern U.S. and western Gulf of Mexico on the NASA ER-2 and DC8; ATTREX (2011-2015) on the NASA Global Hawk over multiple seasons and locations; CONTRAST (Jan/Feb, 2014) in the western Pacific on the NSF/NCAR GV; VIRGAS (Oct., 2015) in the south central US and western Gulf of Mexico on the NASA WB-57; ORCAS (Jan/Feb, 2016) over the southern ocean on the NSF/NCAR GV; and POSIDON (Oct, 2016) in the western Pacific on the NASA WB-57. The model was ?nudged? to NASA Modern-Era Retrospective analysis for Research and Applications, version 2 meteorological fields to represent the synoptic meteorology for each mission. The analysis will focus on along the flight tracks comparisons with the model and will also examine comparisons of vertical distributions and various tracer-tracer correlations. Implications of this new model version on estimated input of inorganic bromine and iodine into the lower stratosphere will be discussed.Fil: Kinnisson, Douglas E.. National Center for Atmospheric Research; Estados UnidosFil: Saiz Lopez, Alfonso. Consejo Superior de Investigaciones CientĂficas. Instituto de QuĂmica FĂsica "Rocasolano"; EspañaFil: Cuevas, Carlos Alberto. Consejo Superior de Investigaciones CientĂficas. Instituto de QuĂmica FĂsica "Rocasolano"; EspañaFil: Fernandez, Rafael Pedro. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas. Centro CientĂfico TecnolĂłgico Conicet - Mendoza; Argentina. Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. Universidad TecnolĂłgica Nacional; ArgentinaFil: Lamarque, Jean Francoise. National Center for Atmospheric Research; Estados UnidosFil: Tilmes, Simone. National Center for Atmospheric Research; Estados UnidosFil: Emmons, Louisa K.. National Center for Atmospheric Research; Estados UnidosFil: Hodzic, Alma. National Center for Atmospheric Research; Estados UnidosFil: Wang, Siyuan. National Center for Atmospheric Research; Estados UnidosFil: Schauffler, Sue M.. National Center for Atmospheric Research; Estados UnidosFil: Navarro, MarĂa. University Of Miami. Rosenstiel School Of Marine Atmospheric Science; Estados UnidosFil: Atlas, Elliot. University Of Miami. Rosenstiel School Of Marine Atmospheric Science; Estados UnidosEGU General Assembly 2019VienaAustriaEuropean Geociences Unio
Isotopic ordering in atmospheric O2 as a tracer of ozone photochemistry and the tropical atmosphere
The distribution of isotopes within O2 molecules can be rapidly altered when they react with atomic oxygen. This mechanism is globally important: while other contributions to the global budget of O2 impart isotopic signatures, the O(3P)â+âO2 reaction resets all such signatures in the atmosphere on subdecadal timescales. Consequently, the isotopic distribution within O2 is determined by O3 photochemistry and the circulation patterns that control where that photochemistry occurs. The variability of isotopic ordering in O2 has not been established, however. We present new measurements of 18O18O in air (reported as Î36 values) from the surface to 33âkm altitude. They confirm the basic features of the clumped-isotope budget of O2: Stratospheric air has higher Î36 values than tropospheric air (i.e., more 18O18O), reflecting colder temperatures and fast photochemical cycling of O3. Lower Î36 values in the troposphere arise from photochemistry at warmer temperatures balanced by the influx of high-Î36 air from the stratosphere. These observations agree with predictions derived from the GEOS-Chem chemical transport model, which provides additional insight. We find a link between tropical circulation patterns and regions where Î36 values are reset in the troposphere. The dynamics of these regions influences lapse rates, vertical and horizontal patterns of O2 reordering, and thus the isotopic distribution toward which O2 is driven in the troposphere. Temporal variations in Î36 values at the surface should therefore reflect changes in tropospheric temperatures, photochemistry, and circulation. Our results suggest that the tropospheric O3 burden has remained within a ±10% range since 1978
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Particle growth in urban and industrial plumes in Texas
Particle size distributions and gas-phase particle precursors and tracer species were measured aboard an aircraft in the plumes downwind from industrial and urban sources in the vicinity of Houston, TX during the daytime in late August and early September 2000. Plumes originating from the Parish gas-fired and coal-fired power plant, petrochemical industries along the Houston ship channel, the petrochemical facilities near the Gulf coast, and the urban center of Houston were studied. Most of the particle mass flux advected downwind of Houston came from the industries and electrical utilities at the periphery of the city rather than from sources in the urban core. In SO2-rich plumes that did not contain elevated concentrations of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), particle volume increased with increasing plume oxidation (age) at a rate consistent with condensation and neutralization of the gas-phase oxidation products Of SO2. In plumes that were rich in both SO2 and VOCs, observed particle growth greatly exceeded that expected from SO2 oxidation, indicating the formation of organic particulate mass. In plumes that were enhanced in VOCs but not in SO2, and in the plume of the Houston urban center, no particle volume growth with increasing plume oxidation was detected. Since substantial particle volume growth was associated only with SO2-rich plumes, these results suggest that photochemical oxidation of SO2 is the key process regulating particle mass growth in all the studied plumes in this region. However, uptake of organic matter probably contributes substantially to particle mass in petrochemical plumes rich in both SO2 and VOCs. Quantitative studies of particle formation and growth in photochemical systems containing nitrogen oxides (NOx = NO + NO2 ), VOCs, and SO2 are recommended to extend those previously made in NOx-VOC systems
Multiscale simulations of tropospheric chemistry in the eastern Pacific and on the U.S. West Coast during spring 2002
Regional modeling analysis for the Intercontinental Transport and Chemical Transformation 2002 (ITCT 2K2) experiment over the eastern Pacific and U.S. West Coast is performed using a multiscale modeling system, including the regional tracer model Chemical Weather Forecasting System (CFORS), the Sulfur Transport and Emissions Model 2003 (STEM-2K3) regional chemical transport model, and an off-line coupling with the Model of Ozone and Related Chemical Tracers (MOZART) global chemical transport model. CO regional tracers calculated online in the CFORS model are used to identify aircraft measurement periods with Asian influences. Asian-influenced air masses measured by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) WP-3 aircraft in this experiment are found to have lower ÎAcetone/ÎCO, ÎMethanol /ÎCO, and ÎPropane/ ÎEthyne ratios than air masses influenced by U.S. emissions, reflecting differences in regional emission signals. The Asian air masses in the eastern Pacific are found to usually be well aged (\u3e5 days), to be highly diffused, and to have low NOy levels. Chemical budget analysis is performed for two flights, and the O3 net chemical budgets are found to be negative (net destructive) in the places dominated by Asian influences or clear sites and positive in polluted American air masses. During the trans-Pacific transport, part of gaseous HNO3 was converted to nitrate particle, and this conversion was attributed to NOy decline. Without the aerosol consideration, the model tends to overestimate HNO3 background concentration along the coast region. At the measurement site of Trinidad Head, northern California, high- concentration pollutants are usually associated with calm wind scenarios, implying that the accumulation of local pollutants leads to the high concentration. Seasonal variations are also discussed from April to May for this site. A high-resolution nesting simulation with 12-km horizontal resolution is used to study the WP-3 flight over Los Angeles and surrounding areas. This nested simulation significantly improved the predictions for emitted and secondary generated species. The difference of photochemical behavior between the coarse (60-km) and nesting simulations is discussed and compared with the observation. Copyright 2004 by the American Geophysical Union
A synthesis inversion to constrain global emissions of very shortâlived chlorocarbons, dichloromethane and perchloroethylene : dichloromethane, and perchloroethylene
Dichloromethane (CH2Cl2) and perchloroethylene (C2Cl4) are chlorinated very short lived substances (Cl-VSLS) with anthropogenic sources. Recent studies highlight the increasing influence of such compounds, particularly CH2Cl2, on the stratospheric chlorine budget and therefore on ozone depletion. Here, a multiyear global-scale synthesis inversion was performed to optimize CH2Cl2 (2006â2017) and C2Cl4 (2007â2017) emissions. The approach combines long-term surface observations from global monitoring networks, output from a three-dimensional chemical transport model (TOMCAT), and novel bottom-up information on prior industry emissions. Our posterior results show an increase in global CH2Cl2 emissions from 637 ± 36 Gg yrâ1 in 2006 to 1,171 ± 45 Gg yrâ1 in 2017, with Asian emissions accounting for 68% and 89% of these totals, respectively. In absolute terms, Asian CH2Cl2 emissions increased annually by 51 Gg yrâ1 over the study period, while European and North American emissions declined, indicating a continental-scale shift in emission distribution since the mid-2000s. For C2Cl4, we estimate a decrease in global emissions from 141 ± 14 Gg yrâ1 in 2007 to 106 ± 12 Gg yrâ1 in 2017. The time-varying posterior emissions offer significant improvements over the prior. Utilizing the posterior emissions leads to modeled tropospheric CH2Cl2 and C2Cl4 abundances and trends in good agreement to those observed (including independent observations to the inversion). A shorter C2Cl4 lifetime, from including an uncertain Cl sink, leads to larger global C2Cl4 emissions by a factor of ~1.5, which in some places improves model-measurement agreement. The sensitivity of our findings to assumptions in the inversion procedure, including CH2Cl2 oceanic emissions, is discussed
Stratospheric Injection of Brominated Very ShortâLived Substances: Aircraft Observations in the Western Pacific and Representation in Global Models
We quantify the stratospheric injection of brominated very shortâlived substances (VSLS) based on aircraft observations acquired in winter 2014 above the Tropical Western Pacific during the CONvective TRansport of Active Species in the Tropics (CONTRAST) and the Airborne Tropical TRopopause EXperiment (ATTREX) campaigns. The overall contribution of VSLS to stratospheric bromine was determined to be 5.0 ± 2.1 ppt, in agreement with the 5 ± 3 ppt estimate provided in the 2014 World Meteorological Organization (WMO) Ozone Assessment report (WMO 2014), but with lower uncertainty. Measurements of organic bromine compounds, including VSLS, were analyzed using CFCâ11 as a reference stratospheric tracer. From this analysis, 2.9 ± 0.6 ppt of bromine enters the stratosphere via organic source gas injection of VSLS. This value is two times the mean bromine content of VSLS measured at the tropical tropopause, for regions outside of the Tropical Western Pacific, summarized in WMO 2014. A photochemical box model, constrained to CONTRAST observations, was used to estimate inorganic bromine from measurements of BrO collected by two instruments. The analysis indicates that 2.1 ± 2.1 ppt of bromine enters the stratosphere via inorganic product gas injection. We also examine the representation of brominated VSLS within 14 global models that participated in the ChemistryâClimate Model Initiative. The representation of stratospheric bromine in these models generally lies within the range of our empirical estimate. Models that include explicit representations of VSLS compare better with bromine observations in the lower stratosphere than models that utilize longerâlived chemicals as a surrogate for VSLS
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Effects of Ozone Isotopologue Formation on the ClumpedâIsotope Composition of Atmospheric O2
Tropospheric 18O18O is an emerging proxy for past tropospheric ozone and freeâtropospheric temperatures. The basis of these applications is the idea that isotopeâexchange reactions in the atmosphere drive 18O18O abundances toward isotopic equilibrium. However, previous work used an offline boxâmodel framework to explain the 18O18O budget, approximating the interplay of atmospheric chemistry and transport. This approach, while convenient, has poorly characterized uncertainties. To investigate these uncertainties, and to broaden the applicability of the 18O18O proxy, we developed a scheme to simulate atmospheric 18O18O abundances (quantified as â36 values) online within the GEOSâChem chemical transport model. These results are compared to both new and previously published atmospheric observations from the surface to 33Â km. Simulations using a simplified O2 isotopic equilibration scheme within GEOSâChem show quantitative agreement with measurements only in the middle stratosphere; modeled â36 values are too high elsewhere. Investigations using a comprehensive model of the OâO2âO3 isotopic photochemical system and proofâofâprinciple experiments suggest that the simple equilibration scheme omits an important pressure dependence to â36 values: the anomalously efficient titration of 18O18O to form ozone. Incorporating these effects into the online â36 calculation scheme in GEOSâChem yields quantitative agreement for all available observations. While this previously unidentified bias affects the atmospheric budget of 18O18O in O2, the modeled change in the mean tropospheric â36 value since 1850 CE is only slightly altered; it is still quantitatively consistent with the iceâcore â36 record, implying that the tropospheric ozone burden increased less than 40% over the twentieth century.
Plain Language Summary
Oxygen in the air is constantly being broken apart and remade. Its constituent atoms are shuffled around by lightâinduced chemical reactions, which cause changes in the number of heavy oxygen atoms that are bound together. The number of these heavyâatom âclumpsâ is sensitive to air temperatures and the presence of air pollution; hence, their variations are being used to understand past highâaltitude temperatures and atmospheric chemistry. This study incorporates oxygen clumping into an atmospheric chemistry model and compares the results to measurements of oxygen clumping in the atmosphere. We find that the model can explain all the modernâday measurements (from the surface to 33Â km altitude), but only if the broader fates of oxygen atomsâthat is, their incorporation into other molecules beyond O2âare considered. Simulations of the preindustrial atmosphere are also generally consistent with snapshots of the ancient atmosphere obtained from O2 trapped in ice cores. The developments described herein will thus enable models to simulate heavy oxygenâatom clumping in past cold and warm climates and enable simulated highâaltitude atmospheric changes to be evaluated directly against iceâcore snapshots of the ancient atmosphere.
Key Points
Online calculations of atmospheric 18O18O variations have been implemented in GEOSâChem, which reproduces all atmospheric observations well
Titration of 18O18O into heavy ozone was determined to be an important missing component of previous 18O18O budgets
Change in atmospheric 18O18O abundance since 1850 CE is still consistent with <40% increase in tropospheric ozone burde
Tracer-Based Determination of Vortex Descent in the 1999-2000 Arctic Winter
A detailed analysis of available in situ and remotely sensed N2O and CH4 data measured in the 1999-2000 winter Arctic vortex has been performed in order to quantify the temporal evolution of vortex descent. Differences in potential temperature (theta) among balloon and aircraft vertical profiles (an average of 19-23 K on a given N2O or CH4 isopleth) indicated significant vortex inhomogeneity in late fall as compared with late winter profiles. A composite fall vortex profile was constructed for November 26, 1999, whose error bars encompassed the observed variability. High-latitude, extravortex profiles measured in different years and seasons revealed substantial variability in N2O and CH4 on theta surfaces, but all were clearly distinguishable from the first vortex profiles measured in late fall 1999. From these extravortex-vortex differences, we inferred descent prior to November 26: 397+/-15 K (1sigma) at 30 ppbv N2O and 640 ppbv CH4, and 28+/-13 K above 200 ppbv N2O and 1280 ppbv CH4. Changes in theta were determined on five N2O and CH4 isopleths from November 26 through March 12, and descent rates were calculated on each N2O isopleth for several time intervals. The maximum descent rates were seen between November 26 and January 27: 0.82+/-0.20 K/day averaged over 50-250 ppbv N2O. By late winter (February 26-March 12), the average rate had decreased to 0.10+/-0.25 K/day. Descent rates also decreased with increasing N2O; the winter average (November 26-March 5) descent rate varied from 0.75+/-0.10 K/day at 50 ppbv to 0.40+/-0.11 K/day at 250 ppbv. Comparison of these results with observations and models of descent in prior years showed very good overall agreement. Two models of the 1999-2000 vortex descent, SLIMCAT and REPROBUS, despite theta offsets with respect to observed profiles of up to 20 K on most tracer isopleths, produced descent rates that agreed very favorably with the inferred rates from observation