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Photochemistry of Ozone. Stratospheric ozone formation and loss Tropospheric ozone formation and loss Some aspects of tropospheric ozone chemistry Reactive NO x chemistry. Stratospheric ozone formation and loss. Oxygen Photolysis The Chapman Cycle Catalytic Ozone Destruction.
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Photochemistry of Ozone Stratospheric ozone formation and loss Tropospheric ozone formation and loss Some aspects of tropospheric ozone chemistry Reactive NOx chemistry
Stratospheric ozone formation and loss • Oxygen Photolysis • The Chapman Cycle • Catalytic Ozone Destruction
Oxygen Photolysis Energy diagram and absorption cross section of molecular oxygen Photodissociation of oxygen occurs only in the stratosphere and above. The produced oxygen atoms are partly in excited state O(1D).
The Chapman Cycle (1) O2 + h O + O (2) O + O2 + M O3 + M (3) O3 + h O2 + O (4) O3 + O O2 + O2 The formation rate of O3 is thus theory observed
Catalytic ozone destruction (5) X + O3 XO + O2 (6) XO + O X + O2 net O3 + O O2 + O2 X can be H, OH, NO, Cl, or Br. (6) is usually the rate-limiting step. Ozone hole: chlorine and bromine „activation“ on polar stratospheric clouds, then catalytic destruction as above.
Brief history of stratospheric ozone 1881 Hartley identifies ozone as main cause for cutoff of solar spectrum at 300 nm 1921 Fabry and Buisson obtain first reliable measurement of overhead column ozone 1918 Strutt measured tropospheric „column“ with „40 ppb or less“ bulk of ozone in stratosphere 1926 Dobson and Harrison measure latitudinal distribution of total ozone 1930 Chapman theory; Schumacher measured rate coefficients 1931-34 Götz identified an ozone layer and located maximum near 22 km 1960 McGrath and Norris discover OH production and propose catalytic ozone destruction cycle 1971 Crutzen and Johnston discover NOx cycle 1974 Molina and Rowland recognize impact of man-made chlorofluoromethanes 1985 Farman discovers Antarctic ozone hole 1987 Montreal protocol
O3 stratosphere CH3OOH H2O2 troposphere PAN hn H2O NO2 Acetone HNO3 H2 HO2 RO2 OH O3 NO Ammonia Sulphur CO VOC Alcohols HCHO deposition Isoprene, Terpenes Br, Cl, I Tropospheric Ozone Chemistry
DJF Stratospheric ozone intrusions The tropospheric ozone „paradox“: Ozone photochemistry in the troposphere can only proceed with help of ozone transported from the stratosphere. Climatology of „deep“ STE events (Sprenger & Wernli, 2002)
O(1D) quantum yield Ozone photolysis O3+h O(3P)+O2, l<800 nm O3+h O(1D)+O2, l<320 nm
The NOx-free atmosphere 1. OH formation (ozone HOx conversion) O3+h O(1D)+O2(majority yields O(3P), which does not react with H2O!) O(1D)+H2O 2*OH (a large fraction is quenched by collision with N2 or O2: O(1D)+M O(3P)+M) 2. HOx (and ozone) loss OH+OH H2O2 or H2O+O OH+O3 HO2+O2 (peroxy radical formation - a minor channel) HO2+O3 OH+2*O2 HO2+HO2 H2O2+O2 HO2+OH H2O+O2
CO and hydrocarbon oxidation 3. CO oxidation OH+CO+O2 HO2+CO2 4. Methane oxidation OH+CH4+O2 CH3O2+H2O (the methyl peroxy radical is born) CH3O2+HO2 CH3O2H+O2 CH3O2+CH3O2 ... (e.g. methanol: CH3OH) 5. HOx regeneration H2O2+h 2*OH (also reaction with OH possible, i.e. HOx loss) CH3O2H+h +O2 OH+HO2+HCHO (formaldehyde)
CO and hydrocarbon oxidation (2) 5. HOx regeneration (continued) HCHO+h H2+CO (ca. 60%) HCHO +h+O2 2*HO2+CO (ca. 40%) HCHO+OH+O2 HO2+CO+H2O 6. Simplified NMHC scheme OH+RH+O2 RO2+H2O (R=C2H5, C3H7, ...) RO2+HO2 or RO2+CH3O2 or RO2+RO2 peroxide peroxide+h+O2 HOx+aldehyde aldehyde+h+O2 HOx and RO2 aldehyde+OH other stuff
The crucial role of NOx 7. The catalytic ozone formation cycle NO+O3 NO2+O2 NO2+h+O2 NO+O3 NO+HO2 NO2+OH (this is the key reaction!) NO+CH3O2 NO2+CH3O (CH3O immediately reacts with O2 to form HO2+HCHO) NO+RO2 NO2+RO 8. The end of the story OH+NO2 HNO3 Note: in the stratosphere catalytic ozone destruction, in the troposphere catalytic ozone formation!
The NOx cycle from Chatfield, 1994
The NOx cycle Nighttime NOx losses NO2+O3 NO3+O2(nighttime reaction) NO2+NO3 N2O5 (nighttime reaction) NO3+h NO2+O or NO+O2 (daytime reaction) PAN (an important reservoir for NOx) RCHO+OH CH3COO2+... (aldehyde oxidation peroxy acetyl radical) NO2+CH3COO2 CH3CONO2+O2(PAN formation) PAN NO2+CH3COO2(thermal decomposition) PAN+h products Terminal loss of NOx occurs through deposition of HNO3, aldehydes, peroxides, …
Heterogeneous loss of nitrogen oxides 1000 hPa Zonal and monthly mean ratio of NOx without and with the heterogeneous reaction of N2O5 on (ammonium sulfate) aerosol 500 hPa from Dentener and Crutzen, 1993
The NOx-HOx connection from Logan, 1981
Summary: The ingredients In order to form ozone in the troposphere, we need: • ozone itself (no ozone no OH radical)source: stratosphere • CO and hydrocarbonssource: anthropogenic and natural emissions • NOxsource: anthropogenic and natural emissions, lightning
Bibliography A few key papers (incomplete listing): • Haagen-Smit, A.J., Chemistry and physiology of Los Angeles Smog, Industrial and Engineering Chemistry, 44(6), 1952. • Chameides, W., and Walker, J.C.G., A photochemical theory of tropospheric ozone, J. Geophys. Res., 78(36), 1973. • Chatfield, R.B., Anomalous HNO3/NOx ratio of rmote tropospheric air, Geophys. Res. Lett., 21(24), 1994. • Crutzen, P.J., The role of NO and NO2 in the chemistry of the troposphere and stratosphere, Ann. Rev. Earth Planet. Sci., 1979. • Dentener, F.J., and Crutzen, P.J., Reaction of N2O5 on tropospheric aerosols, J. Geophys. Res., 98(D4), 1993. • Fishman, J., and Crutzen, P.J., The origin of ozone in the troposphere, Nature, 274(31), 1978. • Lin, X., Trainer, M., and Liu, S.C., On the nonlinearity of the tropospheric ozone production, J. Geophys. Res., 93(D12), 1988.
Bibliography (2) • Logan, J.A., Prather, M.J., Wofsy, S.C., and McElroy, M.B., Tropospheric chemistry: A global perspective, J. Geophys. Res., 86(C8), 1981. • Logan, J.A., Nitrogen oxides in the troposphere: Global and regional budgets, J. Geophys. Res., 88(C15), 1983. • Prather, M.J., and Jacob, D.J., A persistent imbalance in HOx and NOx photochemistry of the upper troposphere driven by deep tropical convection, Geophys. Res. Lett., 24(24), 1997. See also the books from Seinfeld&Pandis, Warneck, and Finnalyson-Pitts&Pitts as well as: • Brasseur, G.P:, Orlando, J.J., and Tyndall, G.S. (eds.), Atmospheric Chemistry and Global Change, Oxford University Press, New York, Oxford, 1999.