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Active and widespread halogen chemistry in the tropical and subtropical free troposphere

Authors :
Bruce Morley
Barbara Dix
Dene Bowdalo
Rainer Volkamer
Daniel J. Jacob
Bradley Pierce
P. Romashkin
Siyuan Wang
Sean Coburn
Mathew J. Evans
Mike Reeves
Theodore K. Koenig
Johan A. Schmidt
Teresa Campos
Eric C. Apel
Julie Haggerty
Rebecca S. Hornbrook
Mark A. Zondlo
Arnout ter Schure
Ed Eloranta
Samuel R. Hall
Sunil Baidar
Ru-Shan Gao
Joshua P. DiGangi
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 112:9281-9286
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2015.

Abstract

Halogens in the troposphere are increasingly recognized as playing an important role for atmospheric chemistry, and possibly climate. Bromine and iodine react catalytically to destroy ozone (O3), oxidize mercury, and modify oxidative capacity that is relevant for the lifetime of greenhouse gases. Most of the tropospheric O3 and methane (CH4) loss occurs at tropical latitudes. Here we report simultaneous measurements of vertical profiles of bromine oxide (BrO) and iodine oxide (IO) in the tropical and subtropical free troposphere (10 °N to 40 °S), and show that these halogens are responsible for 34% of the column-integrated loss of tropospheric O3. The observed BrO concentrations increase strongly with altitude (∼ 3.4 pptv at 13.5 km), and are 2-4 times higher than predicted in the tropical free troposphere. BrO resembles model predictions more closely in stratospheric air. The largest model low bias is observed in the lower tropical transition layer (TTL) over the tropical eastern Pacific Ocean, and may reflect a missing inorganic bromine source supplying an additional 2.5-6.4 pptv total inorganic bromine (Bry), or model overestimated Bry wet scavenging. Our results highlight the importance of heterogeneous chemistry on ice clouds, and imply an additional Bry source from the debromination of sea salt residue in the lower TTL. The observed levels of bromine oxidize mercury up to 3.5 times faster than models predict, possibly increasing mercury deposition to the ocean. The halogen-catalyzed loss of tropospheric O3 needs to be considered when estimating past and future ozone radiative effects.

Details

ISSN :
10916490 and 00278424
Volume :
112
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ff8b987bd75b9ebb18a388bc2d1bc8fa
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1505142112