Back to Search Start Over

Unexpected nascent atmospheric emissions of three ozone-depleting hydrochlorofluorocarbons:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Authors :
Vollmer, Martin K.
Mühle, Jens
Henne, Stephan
Young, Dickon
Rigby, Matthew
Mitrevski, Blagoj
Park, Sunyoung
Lunder, Chris R.
Rhee, Tae Siek
Harth, Christina M.
Hill, Matthias
Langenfelds, Ray L.
Guillevic, Myriam
Schlauri, Paul M.
Hermansen, Ove
Arduini, Jgor
Wang, Ray H. J.
Salameh, Peter K.
Maione, Michela
Krummel, Paul B.
Reimann, Stefan
O'Doherty, Simon
Simmonds, Peter G.
Fraser, Paul J.
Prinn, Ronald G.
Weiss, Ray F.
Steele, L. Paul
Source :
Vollmer, M K, Mühle, J, Henne, S, Young, D, Rigby, M, Mitrevski, B, Park, S, Lunder, C R, Rhee, T S, Harth, C M, Hill, M, Langenfelds, R L, Guillevic, M, Schlauri, P M, Hermansen, O, Arduini, J, Wang, R H J, Salameh, P K, Maione, M, Krummel, P B, Reimann, S, O'Doherty, S, Simmonds, P G, Fraser, P J, Prinn, R G, Weiss, R F & Steele, L P 2021, ' Unexpected nascent atmospheric emissions of three ozone-depleting hydrochlorofluorocarbons : Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences ', Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 118, no. 5, e2010914118, pp. e2010914118 . https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2010914118
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Global and regional atmospheric measurements and modeling can play key roles in discovering and quantifying unexpected nascent emissions of environmentally important substances. We focus here on three hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs) that are restricted by the Montreal Protocol because of their roles in stratospheric ozone depletion. Based on measurements of archived air samples and on in situ measurements at stations of the Advanced Global Atmospheric Gases Experiment (AGAGE) network, we report global abundances, trends, and regional enhancements for HCFC-132b ( C H 2 C l C C l F 2 ), which is newly discovered in the atmosphere, and updated results for HCFC-133a ( C H 2 C l C F 3 ) and HCFC-31 ( C H 2 ClF). No purposeful end-use is known for any of these compounds. We find that HCFC-132b appeared in the atmosphere 20 y ago and that its global emissions increased to 1.1 Gg⋅y −1 by 2019. Regional top-down emission estimates for East Asia, based on high-frequency measurements for 2016–2019, account for ∼95% of the global HCFC-132b emissions and for ∼80% of the global HCFC-133a emissions of 2.3 Gg⋅y −1 during this period. Global emissions of HCFC-31 for the same period are 0.71 Gg⋅y −1 . Small European emissions of HCFC-132b and HCFC-133a, found in southeastern France, ceased in early 2017 when a fluorocarbon production facility in that area closed. Although unreported emissive end-uses cannot be ruled out, all three compounds are most likely emitted as intermediate by-products in chemical production pathways. Identification of harmful emissions to the atmosphere at an early stage can guide the effective development of global and regional environmental policy.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Vollmer, M K, Mühle, J, Henne, S, Young, D, Rigby, M, Mitrevski, B, Park, S, Lunder, C R, Rhee, T S, Harth, C M, Hill, M, Langenfelds, R L, Guillevic, M, Schlauri, P M, Hermansen, O, Arduini, J, Wang, R H J, Salameh, P K, Maione, M, Krummel, P B, Reimann, S, O'Doherty, S, Simmonds, P G, Fraser, P J, Prinn, R G, Weiss, R F & Steele, L P 2021, ' Unexpected nascent atmospheric emissions of three ozone-depleting hydrochlorofluorocarbons : Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences ', Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 118, no. 5, e2010914118, pp. e2010914118 . https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2010914118
Accession number :
edsair.od......2642..3eb30b5d9974ca372af21a165c2d3ddc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2010914118