Title: Tropospheric Ozone Chemistry
1Tropospheric Ozone Chemistry
- David Plummer
- presented at the GCC Summer School
- Montreal, August 7-13, 2003
Outline - Solar radiation and chemistry -
Tropospheric ozone production - Methane oxidation
cycle - Nitrogen species - A look at global
tropospheric ozone - Oxidizing capacity of the
troposphere
2Ozone in the atmosphere
Timeseries of ozone profiles over Edmonton for
2002. From World Ozone Data Centre
(www.woudc.org)
- 90 of total column O3 is found in the
stratosphere
3Solar radiation and chemistry
- the reaction that produces ozone in the
atmosphere - O O2 M ? O3 M
- difference between stratospheric and tropospheric
ozone generation is in the source of atomic O - for solar radiation with a wavelength of less
than 242 nm - O2 hv ? O O
4Solar spectral actinic flux calculated at 50, 40,
30, 20 and 0 km above the surface. From DeMore
et al., 1997.
- little radiation with wavelengths less than 290
nm makes it down to the troposphere
5- photochemical production of O3 in troposphere
tied to NOx (NO NO2) - for wavelengths less than 424 nm
- NO2 hv ? NO O
- but NO will react with O3
- NO O3 ? NO2
- cycling has no net effect on ozone
6- O3-NO-NO2 photochemical steady state
- consider the two reactions just seen
NO2 hv (O2) ? NO O3 J1 NO O3
? NO2 K1
- ignoring other reactions, during daylight this
forms a fast cycle in steady-state - dNO2/dt Prod - Loss 0
- K1NOO3 J1NO2
- NO/NO2 J1/K1O3
- partioning of NOx between NO and NO2 has
important implications for removal of NOx from
the atmosphere
7- presence of peroxy radicals, from the oxidation
of hydrocarbons, disturbs O3-NO-NO2 cycle - NO HO2 ? NO2 OH
- NO RO2 ? NO2 RO
- leads to net production of ozone
8The Hydroxyl Radical
- produced from ozone photolysis
- for radiation with wavelengths less than 320 nm
- O3 hv ? O(1D) O2
- followed by
O(1D) M ? O(3P) M (O2?O3) (90) O(1D)
H2O ? 2 OH (10)
- OH initiates the atmospheric oxidation of a wide
range of compounds in the atmosphere - referred to as detergent of the atmosphere
- typical concentrations near the surface 106 -
107cm-3 - very reactive, effectively recycled
9Oxidation of CO - production of ozone
- CO OH ? CO2 H
- H O2 M ? HO2 M
- NO HO2 ? NO2 OH
- NO2 hv ? NO O
- O O2 M ? O3
10What breaks the cycle?
- cycle terminated by
- OH NO2 ? HNO3
- HO2 HO2 ? H2O2
- both HNO3 and H2O2 will photolyze or react with
OH to, in effect, reverse these pathways - but reactions are slow (lifetime of several days)
- both are very soluble - though H2O2 less-so
- washout by precipitation
- dry deposition
- in PBL they are effectively a loss
- situation is more complicated in the upper
troposphere - no dry deposition, limited wet removal
11Methane Oxidation Cycle
- CH4 is simplest alkane species
- features of oxidation cycle common to other
organic compounds - long photochemical lifetime
- fairly evenly distributed throughout troposphere
- concentrations 1.8ppmv
- reactions form bedrock of the chemistry in the
background troposphere
12- CH4 OH ? CH3 H2O
- CH3 O2 M ? CH3O2 M
- CH3O2 NO ? CH3O NO2
- CH3O O2 ? HCHO HO2
- HO2 NO ? OH NO2
- 2NO2 hv (O2) ? NO O3
- CH4 4 O2 2 hv ? HCHO 2O3 H2O
- HCHO will also undergo further reaction
- HCHO hv ? H2 CO
- ? H HCO
- HCHO OH ? HCO H2O
HCO O2 ? HO2 CO H O2 ? HO2
13Cycle limiting reactions
- OH NO2 ? HNO3
- HO2 HO2 ? H2O2
- but also
- HO2 CH3O2 ? CH3OOH O2
- methyl hydroperoxide (CH3OOH)
- can photolyze or react with OH with a lifetime of
2 days - return radicals to system
- important source of radicals in upper tropical
troposphere - moderately soluble and can be removed from
atmosphere by wet or dry deposition - loss of radicals
14Conceptually
- photolysis of ozone most significant source of OH
- atmospheric oxidation of hydrocarbons initiated
by OH radical - production of peroxy radicals (HO2, RO2) which
interact with O3-NO-NO2 cycle to photo-chemically
produce ozone - produce carbonyl compounds (aldehydes and
ketones) which undergo further oxidation - recycling of OH
- termination by formation of nitric acid (OH NO2
? HNO3) or peroxides (H2O2, ROOH)
15Nitrogen species
- NOx (NO NO2) plays a critical role in the
atmospheric oxidation of hydrocarbons - short chemical lifetime
- from 6 hours in PBL to several days to a week
in the upper troposphere - large variations in concentration
- from 10s ppbv in urban areas to 10s pptv in
remote regions (UT and remote MBL) - gives rise to different chemical regimes
16Regional Ozone perspective - O3 production
- More accurate to talk of NOx/VOC ratio
- VOC - volatile organic carbon
- High NOx/VOC environments
- OH reaction with NO2 dominates
- NO-NO2 cycling inefficient compared with NOx loss
- only found in urban areas
- Low NOx/VOC environments
- high peroxy radical concentrations
- peroxy radical self-reactions become important
sink for radicals - production of H2O2 and ROOH
17Global perspective
- NOx concentrations almost always low enough that
ozone production is NOx limited - globally NOx concentrations control whether local
chemistry creates or destroys ozone - for NOx less than 20 pptv, chemistry results
in net ozone destruction - no NOx to turn-over the NO-NO2 cycle
- O3 hv ? O(1D) O2
- O(1D) H2O ? 2 OH
- also
- HO2 O3 ? OH 2 O2
- particularly important in tropical marine
boundary layer
18Other nitrogen species
- Peroxyacyl nitrates (PANs)
- most important being peroxyacetyl nitrate
- CH3C(O)OONO2
- formed from oxidation of acetaldehyde
- CH3CHO OH ( O2) ? CH3C(O)O2 H2O
- CH3C(O)O2 NO2 M ? CH3C(O)O2NO2 M
- decomposition is strongly temperature dependent
- from 30 minutes at 298K near the surface to
several months under upper tropospheric
conditions - NOx exported from boundary layer to remote
troposphere in the form of PAN - observations show PAN is dominant NOy compound in
northern hemisphere spring troposphere - insoluble
19Other nitrogen species
- N2O5
- formed by
- NO2 O3 ? NO3 O2
- NO2 NO3 ? N2O5
- most important is what happens to N2O5
- N2O5 H2O(s) ? 2 HNO3
- during daylight fast photolysis of NO3 limits
production of N2O5 - NO3 hv ? NO2 O
20- especially important NOx sink at higher latitudes
and in winter - particularly northern hemisphere - OH concentrations much lower
The calculated reduction in NOx and O3 amounts in
the MOZART model with the inclusion of N2O5
hydrolysis. From Tie et al. 2001.
21NOx Sources
- Estimates of annual global NOx emissions for the
early 1990s. Units of Tg-N/year. - Biomass burning includes savannah burning,
tropical deforestation, temperate wildfires and
agricultural waste burning - Soil emission
- enhanced by application of fertilizers
- largest uncertainty is in estimates of canopy
transmission - Lightning
- models use 5.0 Tg-N/yr
- scaling up from observations suggest 20 Tg-N/yr
-
22An example of gridded NOx emissions
23Impacts of NOx emission
- by mass, most NOx is emitted at the surface
- chemical impacts of NOx very non-linear
- limited impact in the continental PBL
- high OH and high NO2/NO ratio near surface result
in a short photo-chemical lifetime - NOx concentrations are already substantial
- per molecule, impact of NOx much greater in free
troposphere - venting to the free troposphere important
- emissions that occur in free troposphere
- aircraft, lightning
24Global tropospheric ozone
- Seasonal cycle of O3 concentrations at different
pressure levels, derived from ozonesonde data at
eight different stations in the northern
hemisphere. From Logan, J. Geophys. Res.,
16115-16149, 1999.
- Remote northern stations
- spring-time maximum
- nearer to industrial emissions
- broader maximum stretching through summer
25O3 at the surface
- Seasonal cycle of O3 concentrations at the
surface for different rural locations in the
United States. - From Logan, J. Geophys. Res., 16115-16149, 1999.
- Surface sites in industrialized regions show an
even more pronounced summer-time peak
26Global distribution
- Spatial distribution of climatological O3
concentrations at 1000hPa. - From Logan, J. Geophys. Res., 16115-16149, 1999.
- constructed from surface observations,
ozonesondes and a bit of intuition - note very low concentrations over tropical
Pacific ocean
27Measurements from satellite
- Data from asd-www.larc.nasa.gov/TOR/data.html
- See Fishman et al., Atmos. Chem. Phys., 3,
893-907, 2003. - Tropospheric residual method
- total column (from TOMS) - stratospheric column
(SBUV)
28Tropospheric ozone budget
- derived from models
- a typical budget for present-day conditions
From Lelieveld and Dentener, J. Geophys. Res.,
3531-3551, 105, 2000
29Range of model predictions
- all global models compared to available
measurements - comparisons becoming more sophisticated
- all show believable ozone
- budgets show large spread in individual terms
Adopted from von Kuhlmann et al., J. Geophys.
Res., in press, 2003.
30Future concerns
- How much have emissions of precursors perturbed
ozone already? - Ozone is reactive
- no ice-core records
- some re-constructed records
- Montsouris measurements suggested surface O3 was
10 ppbv - other information from model simulations
- emissions, particularly biomass burning, hard to
quantify - suggest tropospheric ozone burden has increased
between 25 and 60 since pre-industrial
31The more recent past
- Statistically significant negative trends of 1-2
per year found at several stations in Canada for
1980-1993 (Tarasick et al., Geophys. Res. Lett.,
409-412, 22, 1995) - trends at most other stations in NH ambiguous
- Monthly averaged O3 concentration between 630 and
400 hPa from 9 ozonesonde stations located
between 36 and 59N. From Logan et al. J.
Geophys. Res., 104, 26373-26399, 1999.
32IPCC OxComp simulations for 2100
- Emissions for year 2100 were a bit of a worst
case scenario - CH4 4.3 ppmv NOx 110 Tg-N/yr (32.5)
- CO 2500 Tg/yr (1050) VOC 350 Tg/yr (150)
- mid-latitude O3 increases by 20-30 ppbv at the
surface - puts background O3 in 60-70 ppbv range
- these models did not include impacts of global
warming - increased H2O vapour
- temperature effects on reaction rates
- increasingly coupled models
- inclusion of biosphere-atmosphere interactions
- lightning
33Stability of global OH
- OH originates with O3
- very reactive and very short-lived
- recycling critically important
- OH is responsible for initiating atmospheric
oxidation of hydrocarbons - CH4 lifetime of 10 years
- are changes in chemical composition of the
troposphere affecting average OH?
34Information from methyl chloroform
- CH3CCl3 used as solvent by industry
- atmospheric lifetime of 5-6 years
- main loss by reaction with OH
- some entered stratosphere and enhanced Cl levels
- banned under Montreal protocol
- use was to stop in 1996 in developed countries
- assuming one knows the sources of MCF, it is
possible to calculate an average global OH by
fitting to observed decay
35- Observed MCF concentrations at Barbados.
Vertical bars represent the monthly standard
deviations. Different colour symbols represent
measurements made as part of different networks.
See Prinn et al., J. Geophys. Res., 105,
17751-17792, 2000.
36- Global average OH determined from fitting to
observed MCF concentrations over 3 and 5 year
periods and as a second-order polynomial. From
Krol and Lelieveld, J. Geophys. Res., in press,
2002.
- Minor changes in the time profile of emissions
can give constant OH - banking of MCF in early 1990s
- release in late 1990s
- aircraft observations of plumes of MCF in 2000
over Europe