Back to Search Start Over

Multi-model study of mercury dispersion in the atmosphere: atmospheric processes and model evaluation

Authors :
Travnikov, Oleg
Angot, Helene
Artaxo, Paulo
Bencardino, Mariantonia
Bieser, Johannes
D'Amore, Francesco
Dastoor, Ashu
De Simone, Francesco
Diéguez, María del Carmen
Dommergue, Aurélien
Ebinghaus, Ralf
Feng, Xin Bin
Gencarelli, Christian N.
Hedgecock, Ian M.
Magand, Olivier
Martin, Lynwill
Matthias, Volker
Mashyanov, Nikolay
Pirrone, Nicola
Ramachandran, Ramesh
Read, Katie Alana
Ryjkov, Andrei
Selin, Noelle E.
Sena, Fabrizio
Song, Shaojie
Sprovieri, Francesca
Wip, Dennis
Wängberg, Ingvar
Yang, Xin
Travnikov, Oleg
Angot, Helene
Artaxo, Paulo
Bencardino, Mariantonia
Bieser, Johannes
D'Amore, Francesco
Dastoor, Ashu
De Simone, Francesco
Diéguez, María del Carmen
Dommergue, Aurélien
Ebinghaus, Ralf
Feng, Xin Bin
Gencarelli, Christian N.
Hedgecock, Ian M.
Magand, Olivier
Martin, Lynwill
Matthias, Volker
Mashyanov, Nikolay
Pirrone, Nicola
Ramachandran, Ramesh
Read, Katie Alana
Ryjkov, Andrei
Selin, Noelle E.
Sena, Fabrizio
Song, Shaojie
Sprovieri, Francesca
Wip, Dennis
Wängberg, Ingvar
Yang, Xin
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Current understanding of mercury (Hg) behavior in the atmosphere contains significant gaps. Some key characteristics of Hg processes, including anthropogenic and geogenic emissions, atmospheric chemistry, and air–surface exchange, are still poorly known. This study provides a complex analysis of processes governing Hg fate in the atmosphere involving both measured data from ground-based sites and simulation results from chemical transport models. A variety of long-term measurements of gaseous elemental Hg (GEM) and reactive Hg (RM) concentration as well as Hg wet deposition flux have been compiled from different global and regional monitoring networks. Four contemporary global-scale transport models for Hg were used, both in their state-of-the-art configurations and for a number of numerical experiments to evaluate particular processes. Results of the model simulations were evaluated against measurements. As follows from the analysis, the interhemispheric GEM gradient is largely formed by the prevailing spatial distribution of anthropogenic emissions in the Northern Hemisphere. The contributions of natural and secondary emissions enhance the south-to-north gradient, but their effect is less significant. Atmospheric chemistry has a limited effect on the spatial distribution and temporal variation of GEM concentration in surface air. In contrast, RM air concentration and wet deposition are largely defined by oxidation chemistry. The Br oxidation mechanism can reproduce successfully the observed seasonal variation of the RM ∕ GEM ratio in the near-surface layer, but it predicts a wet deposition maximum in spring instead of in summer as observed at monitoring sites in North America and Europe. Model runs with OH chemistry correctly simulate both the periods of maximum and minimum values and the amplitude of observed seasonal variation but shift the maximum RM ∕ GEM ratios from spring to summer. O3 chemistry does not predict significant seasonal variation of Hg oxidation

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
text, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn990335114
Document Type :
Electronic Resource