Global impacts of tropospheric halogens (Cl, Br, I) on oxidants and composition in GEOS-Chem

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Abstract

We present a simulation of the global present-day composition of the troposphere which includes the chemistry of halogens (Cl, Br, I). Building on previous work within the GEOS-Chem model we include emissions of inorganic iodine from the oceans, anthropogenic and biogenic sources of halogenated gases, gas phase chemistry, and a parameterised approach to heterogeneous halogen chemistry. Consistent with Schmidt et al. (2016) we do not include sea-salt debromination. Observations of halogen radicals (BrO, IO) are sparse but the model has some skill in reproducing these. Modelled IO shows both high and low biases when compared to different datasets, but BrO concentrations appear to be modelled low. Comparisons to the very sparse observations dataset of reactive Cl species suggest the model represents a lower limit of the impacts of these species, likely due to underestimates in emissions and therefore burdens. Inclusion of Cl, Br, and I results in a general improvement in simulation of ozone (O3) concentrations, except in polar regions where the model now underestimates O3 concentrations. Halogen chemistry reduces the global tropospheric O3 burden by 18.6ĝ€%, with the O3 lifetime reducing from 26 to 22 days. Global mean OH concentrations of 1.28ĝ€ × ĝ€106ĝ€moleculesĝ€cmĝ'3 are 8.2ĝ€% lower than in a simulation without halogens, leading to an increase in the CH4 lifetime (10.8ĝ€%) due to OH oxidation from 7.47 to 8.28 years. Oxidation of CH4 by Cl is small (ĝ1/4 ĝ€2ĝ€%) but Cl oxidation of other VOCs (ethane, acetone, and propane) can be significant (ĝ1/4 ĝ€15-27ĝ€%). Oxidation of VOCs by Br is smaller, representing 3.9ĝ€% of the loss of acetaldehyde and 0.9ĝ€% of the loss of formaldehyde.

Figures

  • Table 1. Additional halogen reactions included in this simulation that are not described in previous work (Eastham et al., 2014; Schmidt et al., 2016; Sherwen et al., 2016a). The full reaction scheme is given in Appendix B (Tables B2–B5). The rate constant is calculated using a standard Arrhenius expression A · exp(−Ea
  • Table 2. Global sources of reactive tropospheric inorganic halogens. Sources with fixed concentration in the model for Cly (CH3Cl, CH3Cl2, CHCl3) and Bry (CHBr3) are shown in terms of chemical release (e.g. +Cl, +OH, +hν) and are in bold. Inclusion of chlorine and bromine organic species has been reported before in GEOS-Chem (Eastham et al., 2014; Parrella et al., 2012; Schmidt et al., 2016). X2 (I2) and HOX (HOI) are the inorganic ocean source from Carpenter et al. (2013); XNO2 is the source from the uptake of N2O5 on sea salt (ClNO2).
  • Figure 1. Average annual halogen surface emission of species and column-integrated fluxes for species that have fixed surface concentrations in the model (CH3Cl, CH3Cl2, CHCl3, CHBr3) or those with vertically variable sources (ClNO2 from N2O5 uptake on sea-salt and IX (X=Cl, Br) production from HOI, lNO2, and lNO3 uptake). Values are given in kgXm−2 s−1 (X=Cl, Br, I).
  • Figure 2. Annual global Xy (X=Cl, Br, I) deposition (Xy defined in Appendix C). Values are given in terms of mass of halogen deposited (kgXm−2 s−1, X=Cl, Br, I).
  • Figure 3. Tropospheric distribution of Cly , Bry , and Iy (defined in Appendix C) concentrations. Upper plots show surface and lower plots show zonal values. Only boxes that are entirely tropospheric are included in this plot. The Cly colour bar is capped at 20 pmol mol−1, with a maximum plotted value of 116 pmol mol−1 at the surface over the North Sea. The Iy colour bar is capped at 10 pmol mol−1, with a maximum plotted value of 16.4 pmol mol−1 at the surface over the Red Sea.
  • Figure 4. Tropospheric distribution of IO, BrO, and Cl concentrations. Upper plots show surface and lower plots show zonal values. Only boxes that are entirely tropospheric are included in this plot.
  • Figure 5. Modelled global average vertical Xy (X=Cl, Br, I) (Xy defined in Appendix C). Units are pmol mol−1 of X (where X=Cl, Br, I). For Cly the y axis is capped at 20 pmol mol−1 to show speciation. A Cly maximum of 1062 pmol mol−1 is found within the altitudes shown due to additional HCl contributions increasing with altitude.
  • Figure 6. Annual mean integrated model tropospheric column for BrO and IO in molecules cm−2.

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APA

Sherwen, T., Schmidt, J. A., Evans, M. J., Carpenter, L. J., Großmann, K., Eastham, S. D., … Ordóñez, C. (2016). Global impacts of tropospheric halogens (Cl, Br, I) on oxidants and composition in GEOS-Chem. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 16(18), 12239–12271. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-16-12239-2016

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