3 |
Atmospheric Interactions
|
| P. J. CRUTZEN |
| Abstract | ||
| 3.1 Introduction | ||
| 3.2 Tropospheric Photochemistry | ||
| 3.3 Stratospheric Photochemistry | ||
| 3.4 The Most Important Carbon Compounds | ||
| 3.4.1 Carbon Dioxide | ||
| 3.4.2 Carbon Monoxide | ||
| 3.4.3 Methane | ||
| 3.4.4 Isoprene and Terpenes | ||
| 3.5 The Most Important Nitrogen Compounds | ||
| 3.5.1 Nitric Oxide, Nitrogen Dioxide and Nitric Acid | ||
| 3.5.2 Ammonia | ||
| 3.5.3 Nitrous Oxide | ||
| 3.6 The Most Important Sulphur Compounds | ||
| 3.6.1 Sulphur Dioxide | ||
| 3.6.2 The Reduced Sulphur Gases H2S, (CH3)2S, CH3SH, COS and CS2 | ||
| 3.7 Conclusions | ||
| Acknowledgements | ||
| References | ||
|
Comment to Chapter 3 |
||
| References | ||
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||
This article is a review of the most important photochemical processes that take place in the atmosphere and of the cycles of many C, N, and S containing atmospheric constituents. The emphasis is on the essential role of tropospheric ozone and how the distribution of this gas is influenced by photochemical interactions between carbon and nitrogen containing compounds, which are changing substantially due to man's activities. There is a large potential for tropospheric ozone formation, of which at most only 10% is realized due to generally low NOx concentrations. The input of NOx in the troposphere may be dominated by anthropogenic sources so that tropospheric ozone may have increased in the industrial era.
The budgets (sources and sinks) of many compounds are derived and it is shown that these are mostly dominated by tropospheric reactions. However, several gases are rather inert in the troposphere and their photochemical breakdown in the stratosphere leads to products that influence stratospheric ozone and sulphate aerosol. There often remain large uncertainties in the quantitative aspects of the atmospheric cycles of trace constituents.
Of the elements carbon, nitrogen, sulphur, and phosphorus, gas phase reactions are by far the least important for phosphorus. There are some indications that phosphine (PH3) is released from tropical forest soils (R. Herrera, personal communication), but the residence time of PH3 is probably so short that little atmospheric transfer can occur. Phosphorus enters the atmosphere mainly on soil dust (Duce, Chapter 17, this volume). On the other hand, several C, N, and S compounds have considerable atmospheric concentrations, mainly in combination with the elements O and H. These compounds play an essential role in the gas phase photochemistry and the cycling of many volatile elements in the atmosphere, not only those containing C, N, and S, but also, for example, the photochemically important halogen compounds.
The composition of the natural atmosphere is to a considerable extent determined by biological processes. With the exception of CO2, the typical natural cycle of an element consists of release at the earth's surface as a reduced, often hydrogen-bound gas, its subsequent oxidation in the atmosphere by gas phase photochemical reactions, and finally the removal from the atmosphere by precipitation scavenging, and deposition on the earth's surface. Here, such compounds may serve as electron acceptors in anoxic environments making possible the many microbiological reduction-oxidation processes in the soils and waters of the earth. As two examples we mention methane (CH4), which is photochemically converted to carbon monoxide (CO), and hydrogen sulphide (H2S), which is converted to sulphur dioxide (SO2) in the atmosphere. Further oxidation leads next to carbon dioxide (CO2) and sulphuric acid (H2SO4). Carbon dioxide is removed from the atmosphere mainly through photosynthesis in vegetation, while sulphuric acid is removed mainly through wet and dry deposition. I will note in the following that the natural sources of many biogenic gases are not well known. It should also be mentioned here that CO2 does not play a significant direct role in the photochemistry of the earth's atmosphere, so that the photochemistry of CO2 will not be discussed in the following. The reason for this is that CO2 absorbs the photochemically active ultraviolet radiation in the same wavelength regions as molecular oxygen, which is a thousand times more abundant. The role of CO2 in atmospheric chemistry is indirect by its influence on the temperature structure of the atmosphere and climate.
In contrast to natural, biological processes, man's activities cause the emissions of increasing amounts of oxidized gases into the atmosphere. The total global supply of anthropogenic fixed nitrogen, as NO, and of sulphur, as SO2, are now an appreciable fraction of the total supply of these nutrient elements. In contrast to the biogenic emissions, industrial emissions occur mainly as point or regional sources, so that atmospheric concentrations of the various gaseous pollutants are non-uniformly distributed and their concentrations often strongly correlated. This leads to strong photochemical and chemical interactions, that may result in very different photochemical behavior to that which occurs in clean air masses.
In the following discussion I will review the homogeneous, atmospheric reactions and cycles of the most important gases that contain carbon, nitrogen, and sulphur in combination with hydrogen and oxygen. The gases that will be considered are important because of their role in biological, climatic and photochemical processes. I will emphasize the important role of tropospheric ozone in atmospheric photochemistry, how it influences the cycles of many trace elements and how man's activities affect tropospheric ozone. The experience of the last decade has already shown that there are many ways in which human activities may affect the balance between ozone formation and destruction in the stratosphere and thereby influence the intensity of ultraviolet radiation at the ground, and maybe climate, with possible repercussions for the biosphere.
In the following sections, brief reviews of the homogeneous photochemistry of the troposphere and stratosphere will be presented. Next, the budgets of the photochemically most important carbon, nitrogen and sulphur containing gases will be taken up for review. I will emphasize new developments since the SCOPE 7 study (Svensson and Söderlund, 1976), and interactions between cycles whenever they can be recognized.
Although only about 10% of all atmospheric ozone (O3) is located in the troposphere, the lowest
10
17 km of the atmosphere, this small amount of ozone is nevertheless of fundamental importance for the composition of the earth's atmosphere. The reason for this is the production of the highly reactive hydroxyl (OH) radical by the two reactions:
| (R1) | O3 + hv | O(1D) +O2 (<310 nm;1 nm = l0-9m) | |
| (R2) | O(1D) + H2O | 2OH |
where O(1D) denotes an electronically excited oxygen atom. It is the attack by OH that initiates the oxidation of many trace gases in the atmosphere, the most important examples of which are shown in Table 3.1 and Figure 3.1 (Levy,1971, 1974; McConnell et al., 1971). In the background troposphere, about 60% of the OH radicals react with CO, and about 40% with CH4. Smaller fractions react with the other gases listed in Table 3.1.
The average concentration of hydroxyl in the atmosphere is now estimated to be about 6 x 105 molecules cm-3, with an uncertainty of about a factor of two (Crutzen et al., 1978; Derwent and Eggleton, 1981; Gidel et al., 1982). This estimated range is consistent with the global observations of methylchloroform, which is removed from the atmosphere by reactions with OH and which does not appear to have any atmospheric sources other than the well known industrial emissions. Most hydroxyl is located in equatorial regions, where the intensity of ultraviolet radiation is at a maximum and where absolute water vapour densities are highest (Crutzen et al., 1978; Derwent and Eggleton, 1981). The calculated OH distribution also explains most of the features of the C14O observations in the troposphere (Volt et al., 1979).
Although OH reacts overwhelmingly with CO and CH4, these reactions do not necessarily lead to the removal of hydroxyl from the atmosphere, because hydroxyl will mainly act as a catalyst. For instance, in the presence of sufficient concentrations of another catalyst, nitric oxide, the oxidation of carbon monoxide will lead to the formation of tropospheric ozone, without loss of OH and NO, as follows:
| (R3) | CO + OH | H + CO2 | |
| (R4) | H + O2 + M | HO2 + M | |
| (R5) | HO2 + NO | OH + NO2 | |
| (R6) | NO2 + hv | NO + O (<400 nm) | |
| (R7) | O+O2+M | O3+M | |
|
|
|||
| net: | CO + 2 O2 | CO2 + O3 | |
| (R3) | CO + OH | H + CO2 | |
| (R4) | H + O2 + M | HO2 + M | |
| (R8) | HO2 + O3 | OH + 2O2 | |
|
|
|||
| net: | CO + O3 | CO2 + O2 | |
again does not lead to loss of hydroxyl, and takes place whenever the ratio of the atmospheric concentrations of NO and O3 is less than 2 x 10-4. With ozone volume mixing ratios increasing from about 20 x 10-9 (20 ppbv) at ground level to 100 ppbv at the tropopause, the break-even point between reaction chains
(R3
R7) and (R3, R4, R8) is attained at nitric oxide volume mixing ratios of 4 x 10-12
(4 pptv) at ground level and 20 pptv at the tropopause. These are indeed very low concentrations, but they may nevertheless not be exceeded in extensive regions of the troposphere because of the very short residence times of the oxides of nitrogen, NO and
NO2, which are a result of the rapid formation of highly water-soluble nitric acid by the reactions:
| (R9) | NO + O3 | NO2 + O2 | |
| (R10) | NO2 + OH(+M) | HNO3 (+M) |
Through similar reactions ozone is also produced in the oxidation of CH4 and other hydrocarbons if the mixing ratios of NO are sufficiently large. McFarland et al. (1979) have indeed indicated the possibility of very low background concentrations of NO by the measurements of volume mixing ratios of less than 10 ppt in the marine boundary layer of the tropical Pacific. Noxon (1981) measured profiles of NOx and reported a mixing ratio for NOx (NO + NO2) of 30 pptv at 3 km altitude at Hawaii. There are, unfortunately, too few measurements to derive a typical distribution of NO in the troposphere, and to make a good estimate of the sources and sinks of tropospheric ozone. The only term that can be estimated with reasonable reliability is the global ozone loss by the reactions (R1) and (R2), amounting to about 8 x 1010 molecules cm-2s-1 (Fishman et al., 1979a). This ozone loss may be compared with the estimated downward transport of about 6 x 1010 molecules cm-2s-1 stratospheric ozone by meteorological processes and an ozone loss rate at the ground of the same magnitude (Fabian and Pruchniewicz, 1977). In order to balance the ozone budget of the troposphere, it is, therefore, quite feasible that photochemical interactions between carbon and nitrogen containing gases lead to tropospheric ozone production. This is particularly important as the atmospheric sources of NO, CO, CH4 and other hydrocarbons are greatly influenced by anthropogenic activities, especially in the Northern Hemisphere.
Table 3.1a Budgets of carbon species; atmospheric lifetimes in hours, months, or years; diffusion distances in
E
W, S
N and vertical directions (in km) over which concentrations are reduced to 30% by chemical reactions. Lifetimes and removal rates calculated with (OH) = 6 x 105 molecules cm-3. 1 ppmv = 10-6; 1 ppbv = 10-9; 1
pptv =
10-12
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| Gas | Direct source/year | Secondary source/year | Removal by | Atmospheric life- | Transport distances |
| Source identification | Source identification | times | |||
| volume mixing ratios | |||||
| in unpolluted tropo- | |||||
| sphere | |||||
|
|
|||||
| CO | 4 |
3.7 |
30 x 1014g CO | 2 months | 4000, 2500, 10 |
| Biomass burning | methane oxidation | OH | 50 |
||
| 6.4 x 1014g CO | 4 |
4.5 x 1014g CO | |||
| Industry | C5H8, Cl0H16 | Uptake by soils | |||
| 0.2 |
oxidation | ||||
| Vegetation | |||||
| CH4 | 0.3 |
4 x 1014g CH4 | 7 yrs | Global | |
| Rice paddy fields | OH | 1.5 |
|||
| 0.3 |
|||||
| Natural wetlands | |||||
| 0.6 x 1014g CH4 | |||||
| Ruminants | |||||
| < 1.5 x 1014g CH4 | |||||
| Termites | |||||
| 0.3 |
|||||
| Biomass burning | |||||
| 0.2 x 1014g CH4 | |||||
| Gas leakage | |||||
| C5H8 | 8.3 x 1014g C | 8.3 x 1014g C | 10 hrs | 400, 200, 1 | |
| Cl0H16 | Trees | OH | 0 |
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Table 3.1b Budgets of nitrogen species. For explanation see Table 3.1a
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| Gas | Direct source/year | Secondary source/year | Removal by | Atmospheric life- | Transport distances |
| Source identification | Source identification | times | |||
| volume mixing ratios | |||||
| in unpolluted tropo- | |||||
| sphere | |||||
|
|
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| NOx | 12 |
1.0 |
25 |
1.5 d | 1500,400, 10 |
| (NO+NO2) | Industry | Oxidation of N2O | OH | 1 |
|
| 10 |
Deposition | ||||
| Biomass burning | on soils and | ||||
| 1 |
oceans | ||||
| Lightning | |||||
| 1 |
|||||
| Soils | |||||
| 0.15 |
|||||
| Ocean | |||||
| 0.25 |
|||||
| Jet aircraft | |||||
| HNO3 | 15 |
Rain | 3 d | 3000, 600,1.5 | |
| NO2 + OH | 10-300 pptv | ||||
| N2O | 1.8 |
6 |
global | ||
| Fossil fuel burning | Stratospheric | ||||
| 1 |
photolysis | ||||
| Biomass burning | |||||
| 1 |
|||||
| Oceans, estuaries | |||||
| 1 |
|||||
| Cultivation natural soils | |||||
| < 3 |
|||||
| Fertilized fields | |||||
| ? | |||||
| Natural soils | |||||
| NH3 | 10 |
Rain | <9d | < 9000, 1000, 3 | |
| Domestic animals | 0 |
||||
| 2 |
|||||
| Wild animals | |||||
| < 3 |
|||||
| Fertilized fields | |||||
| <30 |
|||||
| Natural fields | |||||
| 4 |
|||||
| Coal burning | |||||
| <60 |
|||||
| Biomass burning | |||||
|
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Table 3.1c Budgets of sulphur species. For explanation see Table 3.1a. COS and CS2 are not listed here, because too little is known about their sources and sinks. The industrial source of CS2 is about 2 x 1011g S per year
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|
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| Gas | Direct source/year | Secondary source/year | Removal by | Atmospheric | Transport distances |
| Source identification | Source identification | Life-times | |||
| volume mixing ratios | |||||
| in unpolluted tropos- | |||||
| sphere | |||||
|
|
|||||
| SO2 | 64 x 1012g S | 40 |
OH | 5 d | 5000, 700, 2.5 |
| Coal burning | oxidation H2S, DMS | Rain | 10 |
||
| 26 x 1012g S | |||||
| Petroleum burning | |||||
| 11 x 1012g S | |||||
| Non-ferrous ores | |||||
| 10 |
|||||
| Volcanoes | |||||
| H2S | < 4 x 1012g S | OH | 2 d | 2000, 500, 1.5 | |
| (CH3)2S | Agricultural fields | 0 |
|||
| CH3SH | 31 |
||||
| Open ocean | |||||
| 10 x 1012g S | |||||
| Coastal waters | |||||
| 16 x 1012g S (?) | |||||
| Tropical forests | |||||
| 24 x 1012g S (?) | |||||
| Wetlands | |||||
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There are tropospheric ozone
data available that indicate a possible increase of 20% in the middle
troposphere (2
8 km) at north temperate latitudes over the time period
1967
1979 (Angell and
Korshover, 1979), although such an increase seems
not to be present in the Mauna Loa data of the past 6 years (Komhyr,
personal communication).
To emphasize further the importance of tropospheric ozone I also point out its role in the earth's radiation budget, because of its strong absorption band located in the atmospheric `window' region near 9.6 µm. As a result of this, ozone absorbs, and radiates back to the earth's surface, terrestrial radiation that otherwise would escape to space. The particular efficiency of the tropospheric ozone fraction is caused by the pressure broadening of the absorption lines in the troposphere. A hypothetical doubling of tropospheric ozone has been calculated to lead to a surface temperature increase of about 0.7°C (Fishman et al., 1979b).
An approximate upper limit to
the potential ozone production rates in the troposphere can be derived
by assuming that there is enough NO present in the atmosphere that
during the oxidation of a hydrocarbon molecule to CO, as with methane,
there are 2
3 ozone molecules produced per carbon atom
(Crutzen, 1973;
Fishman et al., 1979a). The further oxidation of CO to CO2
subsequently adds another ozone molecule to the atmosphere. Making use
of the information on the sources of CO, CH4 and non-methane
hydrocarbons (Table 3.1), an average global, tropospheric ozone
production potential of 2 x 1012 molecules cm-2s-1
can be calculated. The actual tropospheric ozone production is
probably at most 10% of this potential, because ozone loss at the ground
or by photochemical reactions is about 1011 molecules cm-2s-1
(Fishman et al., 1979a). This indicates that much oxidation
of hydrocarbons, which occurs mainly in the tropics, must take place
without the production of ozone. One may guess that this is so because
the air above the tropical
forests is at present practically devoid of nitric oxide. Future
expansions of industrial and biomass burning activities in the tropics
may, however, have large implications for the tropospheric ozone
distribution, because of the enhanced supply of nitric oxide to the
boundary layer of the atmosphere in which the oxidation of isoprene and
terpenes to CO occurs. It should be mentioned here that most of the
nitric oxide produced by lightning is deposited above the tropical
boundary layer where the concentrations of these highly reactive
hydrocarbons should be rather low. I will return to the possible
implications of human activities on the air chemistry of the tropics
when I discuss the role of nitric oxide in the production of carbon
monoxide.


Figure 3.1 Compilation of the
most important photochemical processes in the atmosphere, including estimates of
flux rates expressed in moles per year between the earth's surface and the
atmosphere and within the atmosphere. The processes are numbered and explained
in the figure texts. The symbol 'E' means:
10y where y is the number that follows E, e.g. 2E13 is 2
1013
As carbon monoxide is the main reactant of hydroxyl, an increase in the atmospheric carbon monoxide content could lead to lower tropospheric concentrations of OH and thereby cause an increase in the tropospheric abundances of those gases that are mainly removed by reactions with OH (Wofsy, 1976). This could have further chemical and climatological consequences, as for instance a larger transfer of gases to the stratosphere with possible effects on ozone. It is likely, however, that a rise in the tropospheric CO abundance by anthropogenic activities will be accompanied by increases in the tropospheric NO abundance. This would lead to higher ozone concentrations. The increases in NO and O3 would tend to increase the OH concentrations through reactions (R1), (R2), and (R5), thereby counteracting the effect of CO.
Methane oxidation is not only a potentially significant source of CO, but the atmospheric concentrations of OH may largely be determined by the particular reaction paths that are followed during methane oxidation. Again, nitric oxide plays an important role in this. With enough NO present (>10 pptv) the reaction path, leading to formaldehyde (CH2O), is as follows:
| (R11) | CH4 + OH | CH3 + H2O | |
| (R12) | CH3 + O2 + M | CH3O2 + M | |
| (R13) | CH3O2 + NO | CH3O + NO2 | |
| (R14) | CH3O + O2 | CH2O + HO2 | |
| (R5) | HO2 + NO | OH + NO2 | |
| (R6) | NO2 + hv | NO + O (<400 nm), 2x | |
| (R7) | O + O2 + M | O3 + M, 2x | |
|
|
|||
| net: | CH4 + 4 O2 | CH2O + H2O + 2 O3 | |
With little NO present, CH4 oxidation may follow the pathway:
| (R11) | CH4 + OH | CH3 + H2O | |
| (R12) | CH3 + O2 + M | CH3O2 + M | |
| (R15) | CH3O2 + HO2 | CH3O2H + O2 | |
| (R16) | CH3O2H + hv | CH3O + OH | |
| (R14) | CH3O + O2 | CH2O + HO2 | |
|
|
|||
| net: | CH4 + O2 | CH2O + H2O | |
However, the photolysis of CH3O2H is slow, which results in a residence time of 1 week for this compound. Thus the methyl hydroperoxide may be rained out of the atmosphere or react with the earth's surface or aerosol particles. If this is the case, the oxidation of CH4 will lead to a loss of two odd hydrogen radicals (OH and HO2 and no formation of CO would occur in the atmosphere. It follows that the pathways of methane oxidation in the atmosphere are not yet satisfactorily resolved. More intricate questions will have to be addressed regarding the oxidation of higher hydrocarbons.
An interesting, and potentially important, interaction between carbon and nitrogen gases in the atmosphere occurs through the formation of certain organic nitrate molecules during the oxidation of hydrocarbons. The most important of these are probably the peroxy-acyl nitrates, especially peroxy-acetyl nitrate (PAN) with the chemical formula CH3C(=O)O2NO2. PAN thermally decomposes in the atmosphere according to the reactions
| (R17) | CH3(C=O)O2NO2 | CH3(C=O)O2 + NO2 | |
| (R18) | CH3(C=O)O2 + NO | CH3 + CO2 + NO2 |
or,
| (R19) | CH3(C=O)O2 + HO2 | CH3 (C=O)O2H + O2 | |
| (R20) | CH3(C=O)O2H + hv | CH3 + CO2 + OH |
depending
on the concentration of nitric oxide. Based on information by Hendry and
Kenly (1977) and Cox and Roffey (1977), the following values are
calculated for the atmospheric residence time of PAN against
photochemical destruction for several heights in the U.S. standard
atmosphere: at z = 0 km, T = 288K,
(PAN) = 3 days;
z = 4 km, T= 262K,
(PAN) = 1 month; z = 6 km,
T = 249K,
(PAN) = 1 yr;
z = 8 km,
Because of the strong temperature dependence of reaction (R17), the lifetime of PAN against thermal decomposition increases dramatically with height. Likewise, higher PAN concentrations in the atmosphere may be favoured during the winter season (Hendry and Kenley, 1977). Although photolysis of PAN should be rather slow, the only ultraviolet spectrum of PAN published so far (Stephens, 1969) does not contain enough information to exclude significant photolysis in the middle and upper troposphere and stratosphere. Reaction of PAN with OH may likewise not entirely be neglected in these regions (Atkinson et al., 1979), but should not result in an atmospheric residence time shorter than several months.
Surprisingly, PAN is slowly lost from the atmosphere by wet and dry removal. A laboratory study by Garland and Penkett (1976) gave a deposition rate of PAN on water surfaces that was slower than that of ozone. Like ozone, PAN is not removed by rainfall, so that in the free troposphere above 3 km, the atmospheric lifetime of this gas is clearly much larger than that of NOx. Long range transport of NOx may, therefore, occur in the middle and upper troposphere with PAN as the vehicle. When PAN reaches the boundary layer it is thermally decomposed and NOx is released to the atmosphere (Crutzen, 1979).
PAN is
formed in polluted air by photochemical reactions, involving non-methane
hydrocarbons and NOx and has been observed in many
urban environments (e.g. Stephens, 1969; Lonneman et al, 1976;
Nieboer and van Ham, 1976; Penkett et al., 1977; Spicer, 1977;
Tuazon et al., 1981). At high concentrations this gas is a major
phytotoxicant and it affects health by causing eye irritation. In
polluted air close to urban centres it is often present in
concentrations similar to those of nitric acid and typically 10
20%
those of NOx (Spicer, 1977; Tuazon et al.,
1981). PAN is formed from acetaldehyde (CH3CHO), which is a
photochemical intermediate in the photochemical decay of many
non-methane hydrocarbons (Demerjian et al., 1974). The simplest
chain of reactions leading to the formation of PAN occurs, following the
oxidation of ethane, as follows:
| (R21) | C2H6 + OH | C2H5 + H2O | ||
| (R22) | C2H5 + O2 + M | C2H5O2 + M | ||
| (R23) | C2H5O2 + NO | C2H5O + NO2 | ||
| (R24) | C2H5O + O2 | CH3CHO + HO2 | ||
| (R25) | CH3CHO + OH | CH3CO + H2O | ||
| (R26) | CH3CO + O2 + M | CH3(C=O)O2 + M | ||
| (R17) | CH3(C=O)O2 + NO2 + M | CH3(C=O)O2NO2 + M | ||
C2H6
is present in the troposphere at sufficiently high volume mixing ratios
(1
2 ppbv) (Singh et
al., 1979; Rudolph et
al., 1981) so
that appreciable production of PAN from NOx may take place
anywhere in the atmosphere (Singh and Hanst, 1981); this makes the
possible role of PAN in global atmospheric photochemistry especially
worthwhile to investigate. As observations at ground level in rural
areas show (Penkett et al., 1977; Singh et al., 1979) PAN
is not restricted to urban environments. In fact, PAN has been observed
on several cruises in the subtropical and tropical Atlantic, whenever
colder and more polluted air masses could reach the lower latitudes.
Typical sea level concentrations during such episodes were of the order
of 50 pptv (Guicherit, private
communication). With more PAN expected in the background middle and
upper troposphere (Crutzen,1979; Singh and Hanst, 1981), PAN could be an
important reservoir species for the long range transport of NOx.
The previously mentioned reactions are of critical importance in tropospheric photochemistry, because of their role in determining the concentrations of OH in background air. Most photochemistry of the gas phase in the troposphere is derived from this. For example, it is normally assumed that after the initial attack by hydroxyl, the reduced sulphur gases H2S, (CH3)2S and CH3SH are rapidly converted to SO2. However, this has only been demonstrated in the laboratory for H2S, while SO2 formation did not take place for (CH3)2S (Cox and Sandalls, 1974), so that atmospheric reaction chains that do not produce SO2, cannot be ruled out. In the presence of enough NO, we may even speculate about the possibility of formation of carbonyl sulphide (COS) via the reaction sequence:
| (R27) | CH3SCH3 + OH | CH3SCH2 + H2O | |
| (R28) | CH3SCH2 + O2 + M | CH3SCH2O2 + M | |
| (R29) | CH3SCH2O2 + NO | CH3SCH2O + NO2 | |
| (R30a) | CH3SCH2O | CH3S + CH2O (probable) | |
| (R30b) | CH3SCH2O + O2 | CH3SCHO + HO2 (not impossible) | |
| (R31) | CH3SCHO + OH | H2O + CH3 + COS |
Although less likely, it may not be ruled out that the initial attack of OH on (CH3)2S occurs by addition of OH to S (Atkinson et al., 1978; Kurylo, 1978). Also, in the absence of enough NO, peroxides and many other compounds may be formed that can be removed heterogeneously from the atmosphere (Bentley et al., 1972; Panther and Penzhorn, 1980), so that only a fraction of the (CH3)2S may be converted to COS.
Because
COS is a sulphur compound with a much longer atmospheric lifetime (
years) than (CH3)2S (
days), it will be transported
globally and reach the stratosphere (Hanst et al., 1975; Sandalls
and Penkett, 1977; Inn et al., 1979; Torres et al., 1980).
The photolysis of COS leads to the SO2 and H2SO4
needed to explain the stratospheric sulphate layer during periods of low
volvanic activity (Crutzen, 1976). Through its influence on the
stratospheric aerosol layer, COS is of some significance for the earth's
climate; the existence of any long term trends in the atmospheric
abundance of COS should be ascertained (Turco et al., 1980;
Hofmann and Rosen,1981).
Carbonyl sulphide, with an atmospheric volume mixing ratio of about 0.5 ppbv, is probably the most abundant sulphur species of the atmosphere. Recently, there have been some speculations that this gas (or CS2) would also be the precursors of the SO2 that has been measured in the middle and upper troposphere over the Pacific (Maroulis et al., 1980). However, the proposed reaction mechanisms via reaction with hydroxyl (Logan et al., 1979; Sze and Ko, 1980) have been shown to be incorrect (Atkinson et al., 1978; Ravishankara et al., 1980). The hypothesis that COS oxidation in the stratosphere is an important source of SO2 and sulphate during periods with little volcanic activity has, however, probably been shown to be correct from measurements of COS and SO2 in the stratosphere (Inn et al., 1979; Meixner, 1981).
A particularly interesting kinetic observation has recently been made by Jones et al. (1982), who showed that CS2 reacts with OH only in the presence of O2 via
| (R32a) | CS2 + OH + O2 | COS + SO2 + H |
These results have been confirmed by Niki and co-workers (Niki, personal communication).
Likewise, Jones et al. (1982) have reported that the photodissociation reactions occur with a quantum yield of 10-3 in the 320 nm absorption band, making the two listed pathways to COS and SO2 almost of equal importance. These reactions may be particularly important as sources of atmospheric COS. Recently, this gas has also been identified as a potential corrosion agent (Graedel et al., 1981).
| (R32b) | CS2 + hv | CS2* | |
| (R32c) | CS2*+ O2 | COS + O |
The oxidation of SO2 to H2SO4 in the presence of NOx also involves initiation by reaction with hydroxyl, leading, for example, to the reaction sequence (Calvert et al., 1978):
| (R33) | SO2 + OH + O2 | HSO5 | |
| (R34) | HSO5 + NO | HSO4 + NO2 | |
| (R35) | HSO4 + HO2 | H2SO4 + O2 |
At low NO concentrations the oxidation steps are less certain (Davis and Klauber, 1975; Davis et al., 1979).
An interesting possible influence that NOx might exert on the SO2 oxidation cycle in industrial air masses has recently been pointed out (Rodhe et al., 1981). Because reaction (R10) between OH and NO2 is about ten times faster than reaction (R33) it may act as a sink for OH when the mixing ratio of NOx is of the order of a few ppb or larger. Under situations when photochemical oxidation is important, the oxidation of SO2 may, therefore be delayed until the concentrations of NO2 become smaller than about 1 ppbv. At higher NOx concentrations, the production of H2O2 from will be suppressed because of reaction (R5). As H2O2 may be an important oxidant of SO2 in water (Penkett et al., 1979), the oxidation of SO2 in clouds likewise may be delayed.
| (R36) | HO2 + HO2 | H2O2 + O2 |
Although mainly gas phase reactions leading to SO2 oxidation have been discussed, it is clear that heterogeneous and aqueous phase reactions may be at least as important as homogeneous reactions for the oxidation of SO2 to H2SO4, especially during winter time at middle and high altitude (see e.g. Shaw and Rodhe, 1981).
Under most atmospheric conditions the conversion of NOx to HNO3 via reaction (R10) occurs within a few days. The atmospheric residence time of highly soluble HNO3 must be shorter than that of water vapour, which is about 9 days (Levine and Schwartz, 1981). As this is much less than the time scale of 2 months needed for HNO3 to convert back to OH and NO2, particularly through the photolysis reaction the formation of nitric acid by reaction (R10) provides an efficient sink for NOx. In this way, an appreciable upward transport of NO and NO2 to the stratosphere is made difficult.
| (R37) | HNO3 + hv | OH + NO2 |
It remains, however, of interest to explore the possibility of some leakage of NOx and NO2 (and other pollutant gases, such as SO2) through the tropospheric water vapour and cloud filter to higher altitudes (middle and upper troposphere, lower stratosphere). One mechanism for such transport may be the rapid upward transport in frontal zones and especially thunderstorms so that reaction (R10) cannot be completed. Thunderstorms, which penetrate the tropopause, may directly transfer lightning-produced and boundary-layer NOx into the lower stratosphere. As a consequence of this, outside polluted areas, such rapid transfer could bring about an increase of NOx mixing ratios with altitude, providing a complementary interpretation to the NOx profiles to the downward transport from the stratosphere proposed by Liu et al. (1980). This may be especially important for the tropical band and during summertime at mid-latitudes. Another mechanism may be transport at high latitudes during winter, when little or no OH is produced by reaction (R2) and when, furthermore, precipitation occurs in rather small amounts and more as snow, which may be less efficient than rain in scavenging trace gases. This possibility of global NOx transport is speculative, though not entirely unreasonable, judging from observations of considerable pollution levels in the Arctic regions during winter (Rahn and Heidam, 1981; Shaw, 1981).
Observations of HNO3 by Lazrus and co-workers (Lazrus and Gandrud, 1974; Huebert and Lazrus, 1978) and of NO2 by Noxon (1978, 1979) in areas remote from pollution sources have shown volume mixing ratios of NO2 and HNO3 that are substantially larger in the stratosphere than in the troposphere. This indicates a net transfer of odd nitrogen from the stratosphere to the troposphere, but does not rule out the possibility of a significant transport of some tropospheric NOx to the lower stratosphere at preferred locations. One-dimensional models are totally inadequate to address this issue and far too few data are available to make a reliable judgment on this interesting matter.
Finally, I shall also briefly discuss whether photochemical reactions may affect ammonia. For this gas, both uptake at the earth's surface and release by microbiological processes should be considered in order to establish the overall net source of NH3 to the atmosphere. The only homogeneous gas phase reaction of ammonia is again reaction with OH:
| (R38) | OH + NH3 | NH2 + H2O |
This
reaction is, however, rather slow (k38
1.5 x 10-13cm3 molecule-1s-1),
so that with average (OH)
6 x 105 molecules cm-3,
NH3 would remain in the atmosphere for a season, if reaction
(R38) represents the only atmospheric loss process. In reality, ammonia
will be removed from the atmosphere on the average during a period of
about 9 days, which represents the average residence time of water
vapour in the atmosphere. Thus, at most only a fraction of atmospheric
NH3, about 10%, could react with OH. In addition, the NH2
radical that is formed can react with HO2:
| (R39) | NH2 + HO2 | NH3 + O2 |
providing a pathway back to NH3. Such reactions with radicals or minor atmospheric constituents are important because the reaction
| (R40) | NH2 + O2 + M | NH2O2 + M |
is slow. It remains to be seen whether NH3 oxidation would represent a source or a sink for atmospheric NOx (McConnell, 1973) through reactions such as (Lesclaux and Demissy, 1977; Hack et al., 1978; Kurasawa and Lesclaux, 1980):
| (R41) | NH2 + NOx | H2O + N2Ox-1(x = 1,2) | |
| (R42) | NH2 + O3 | NH2O + O2 |
where further oxidation of NH2O may lead to NOx, probably via HNO formation. The break-even point between reactions (R41) and (R42) occurs at about 60 pptv of NO. Such mixing ratios of NOx can indeed be reached in continental, agricultural areas where we expect substantial emissions of atmospheric NH3 to take place. It may be that NH3 oxidation implies a sink for some atmospheric NOx and a source for N2O. It is, however, not possible to make a numerical assessment because of insufficient information on the distributions of NOx, OH and NH3.
The great importance of NH3 in atmospheric chemistry is due to its role in establishing the pH of rain and cloud water. A discussion of this may be found in the overview paper of Taylor et al. (Chapter 4, this volume).
The temperature structure and the dynamic processes in the stratosphere are to a major degree determined by the absorption of solar ultraviolet energy by ozone. The total amount of ozone in the stratosphere is nevertheless rather small; it corresponds to the number of air molecules that are contained in a 3 mm thick layer at standard temperature and pressure. As I have noted, the troposphere contains only 10% of the atmospheric ozone, so that most ozone is located in the stratosphere, which is between 10 and 50 km. Atmospheric ozone also plays an important ecological role. Most ultraviolet solar radiation between about 210 and 310 nm is filtered out by atmospheric ozone. However, penetration of UV radiation to ground level starts at about 300 nm and increases by orders of magnitude within the next 20 nm. It is this radiation that may be biologically harmful. The penetration: of this radiation to the ground is enhanced by reduction of the ozone column.
Since the beginning of the 1970s it has become increasingly clear that a number of human activities can lead to global changes in the amount of stratospheric ozone. Following suggestions by Johnston (1971) and Crutzen (1971), initial attention was directed to pollution of the stratosphere by direct injections of NO from high-flying aircraft. Earlier, Crutzen (1970) had proposed that NOx (NO + NO2) would catalyse the destruction of ozone and limit its stratospheric abundance by a simple set of photochemical reactions:
| (R43) | O3 + hv | O + O2 (< 1140 nm) | |
| (R44) | O + NO2 | NO + O2 | |
| (R45) | NO + O3 | NO2 + O2 | |
|
|
|||
| net: | 2 O3 | 3 O2 | |
| (R46) | O2 + hv | 2 O (< 240 nm) | |
| (R7) | O + O2 + M | O3 + M(2x) | |
|
|
|||
| net: | 3 O2 | 2 O3 | |
| (R1) | O3 + hv | O(1D) + O2 (>310 nm) | |
| (R47) | O(1D) + N2O | 2 NO |
Stratospheric ozone may especially be affected by compounds that are relatively inert in the troposphere, because of a low solubility in water, a slow photolysis and a slow reaction with OH (e.g. nitrous oxide and several chlorocarbon gases, such as natural CH3Cl and industrially produced CFCl3, CF2Cl2, CCl4, and CH3CCl3). Another way to influence stratospheric chemistry is by direct injection of material in the upper troposphere and stratosphere well above most atmospheric water and water vapour (e.g., volcanic eruptions, meteoritic impacts, nuclear weapons testing, and emissions from aircraft in the stratosphere).
The oxides of nitrogen, NOx, play a remarkable catalytic role in the ozone balance of the atmosphere. Above about 25 km the net effect of NOx additions to the stratosphere will be a lowering of ozone concentrations by the set of reactions present earlier (R43 + R44 + R45). However, below about 25 km in the stratosphere, NOx protects ozone from destruction. An important reason for this is a set of reactions:
| (R5) | HO2 + NO | OH + NO2 | |
| (R6) | NO2 + hv | NO + O | |
| (R7) | O+O2+M | O3+M | |
|
|
|||
| net: | HO2 + O2 | OH + O3 | |
As we have shown before, this reaction set is also basically the cause of ozone production that takes place in the troposphere. In the lower stratosphere, the chain of reactions (R5 + R6 + R7) tends to counteract the destruction of ozone by the catalytic reaction pair:
| (R48) | OH + O3 | HO2 + O2 | |
| (R8) | HO2 + O3 | OH + 2 O2 | |
|
|
|||
| net: | 2 O3 | 3 O2 | |
| (R48) | OH + O3 | HO2 + O2 | |
| (R5) | HO2 + NO | OH + NO2 | |
| (R6) | NO2 + hv | NO + O | |
| (R7) | O+O2+M | O3+M | |
|
|
|||
|
no net chemical effect. |
|||
An additional role of NOx in the stratosphere occurs through interactions with Cl and ClO. As with NOx, chlorine atoms and chlorine monoxide molecules participate in an effective catalytic chain of reactions that converts ozone back to molecular oxygen. This cycle goes as follows:
| (R43) | O3 + hv | O + O2 | |
| (R49) | O + CIO | Cl + O2 | |
| (R50) | Cl + O3 | ClO + O2 | |
|
|
|||
| net: | 2 O3 | 3 O2 | |
| (R51) | NO + ClO | Cl + NO2 | |
| (R52) | Cl + CH4 | HCl + CH3 |
transform the catalysts Cl and ClO into HCl, which does not react photochemically with ozone. Furthermore, since the reaction
| (R53) | ClO + NO2 + M | ClNO3 + M |
ties up both some ClO and some NO2 as non-reactive ClNO3, it is clear that ozone removal by NOx additions to the stratosphere is mitigated by the NOx interference in the chlorine cycle. The photochemical chains of reactions required to explain the distribution of stratospheric ozone and to predict the further effects of human activities are thus quite complicated. However, additions of NO to the low stratosphere may tend to increase local ozone concentrations by reducing some of the ozone loss that would otherwise occur because of the catalytic action of OH and HO2, and Cl and ClO.
The
importance of the ozone production and protection by NOx
in the stratosphere was dramatically emphasized by discoveries of Howard
and Evenson (1977) and Zahniser and Howard (1979), who found reaction
(R8) and especially (R5) to be much faster than previously estimated.
This finding resulted in substantial downward revisions of estimated
total ozone-column reductions due to stratospheric NOx
additions from aircraft (Duewer et al., 1977; Crutzen and Howard,
1978; Logan et al., 1978). As NOx is produced
by the oxidation of N2O via reaction (R47), the same
conclusions are also partially valid regarding the possible effects of a
future rise in the atmospheric content of nitrous oxide. In this case,
however, more of the additional NOx produced in
reaction (R47) will reach the upper regions of the stratosphere, where
the reaction set (R43
R45) is more important.
In
1974, theoretical predictions (Crutzen, 1974) of total ozone reductions
that used the then recommended rate constants yielded the following approximate
relationship between total ozone change (
V3) and a
hypothetical increase in the volume mixing ratio of atmospheric nitrous
oxide,
µ(N2O),
![]()
A doubling in the atmospheric abundance of N2O was therefore expected to yield a 20% decrease in total ozone. New rate constants for reactions (R5) and (R8), determined by advanced laboratory techniques first led to substantial downward revisions in the ozone-reduction estimates. Actually, it was consequently estimated that an increase in the atmospheric N2O abundance could lead to an increase in total ozone. Presently, however, it is calculated that an increase in the atmospheric N2O abundance will lead to a decrease in total ozone. This author's own calculations indicate a loss in total stratospheric ozone of about 12% for a doubling of N2O, keeping all other factors that affect ozone constant. The reason for this finding is that substantially smaller concentrations of OH in the lower stratosphere below about 30 km are now predicted through new calculations of the rate coefficients related to the formation and photolysis of HO2, NO2, and HNO3. The role of NO2 is that of a catalyst in the reaction cycles:
| (R54) | HO2 + NO2(+M) | HNO4 (+M) | |
| (R55) | OH + HNO4 | H2O + NO2 + O2 | |
|
|
|||
| net: | OH + HO2 | H2O + O2 | |
| (R10) | OH + NO2 (+M) | HNO3 (+M) | |
| (R56) | OH + HNO3 | H2O + NO3 | |
| (R57) | NO3 + hv | NO2 + O | |
|
|
|||
| net: | 2 OH | H2O + O | |
These
reactions enhance the loss of HOx from the lower stratosphere, so that
much less HNO3. and more NOx, is calculated than was the case
before. The newer calculations are in much better agreement with
observations (Coffey et al., 1981a). As a consequence, the normal ozone
balance in the lower stratosphere is again much more affected by NOx
catalysis, i.e. reactions (R43
R45), and not so much by
HOx, and ClOx,.
Thus the compensation effects of NOx, in the HOx, and ClO2
catalytic cycles, as discussed before, can not make up for the enhanced
loss of ozone due to NOx, catalysis in the entire stratosphere.
The importance of COS as a source of sulphur in the stratosphere, where this gas is efficiently photolysed by ultraviolet radiation has already been discussed. More detailed discussions on the many aspects of stratospheric photochemistry are available in recent reviews (e.g. WMO/NASA,1982).
3.4.1 Carbon Dioxide
With volume mixing ratios of about 3.3 x 10-4, carbon dioxide is by far the most abundant carbon-containing gas in the atmosphere. Its atmospheric concentration is increasing by about 0.5% or roughly 1.6 ppm per year (Freyer, 1979). This increase is mainly due to the burning of fossil fuels, which amounts to about 5.3 x 1015g C/yr (Rotty, 1981). Only about 58% of this input remains airborne, but a better estimate can not be made because the source or sink of CO2, connected with changes in the global biomass is not well known (see, e.g., Seiler and Crutzen, 1980; Melillo and Gosz, Chapter 6, this volume).
Carbon
dioxide is important for the radiative heat balance of the earth. A
doubling of atmospheric CO2, which may become established by
the middle of the next century, can cause a climatic warming by 1.5
6°C
(Hansen et al., 1981). Contrary to the effects in the
troposphere, an increase in atmospheric CO2 leads to a
cooling of the stratosphere, which leads to increased ozone
concentrations, partially offsetting the ozone depletions caused by
other anthropogenic activities, such as chlorofluorocarbon release. CO2
is not a photochemically active gas, except insofar as it affects
atmospheric temperatures. We will restrict the discussion of it to what
is said above and refer to the extensive reports of the past years, e.g.
the SCOPE 13 report (Bolin et al.; 1979).
3.4.2 Carbon Monoxide
This
gas has somewhat variable concentrations in the atmosphere. High
concentrations, about 150
200
ppbv, are found near the earth's surface
at the middle and high latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere, which
clearly suggests an anthropogenic source (Seiler, 1974). In the Southern
Hemisphere the CO volume mixing ratios are near 50
60 ppbv southwards of
20°S (Seiler, 1974; Heidt et al., 1980). Model
calculations show, however, that the anthropogenic source of carbon
monoxide cannot be the dominant one. Because of reaction with OH, a very
large source of CO must be located in the equatorial regions that cannot
be supplied from local industrial emissions or transported from
mid-latitudes. Large natural, mainly tropical, sources of CO with a
total strength of 2
3 x 1015g CO/yr must exist. The oxidation
of methane can only contribute about 25% of this.
Two important mechanisms of CO production in the tropics have, therefore, been postulated. Zimmerman et al. (1978) proposed that the oxidation of isoprene (C5H8) and of terpenes (C10H16), which are emitted by trees, constitute the required source. They estimated worldwide isoprene and terpene emission rates of 3.5 x 1014 and 4.8 x 1014 g C/yr respectively, and derived a range of global CO production rates of between 4 and 13 x 1014g/yr from their oxidation. The other important source of carbon monoxide in the tropics comes from the burning of biomass, mainly due to a variety of land clearing operations, grass fires in savannas, agricultural waste and firewood burning (Seiler and Crutzen, 1980). The total estimated CO source from these fires was estimated at about 8 x 1014 g C/yr with an uncertainty of at least a factor of 2 (Crutzen et al., 1979). Although the carbon monoxide budget of the atmosphere may be explained in these terms, there are large uncertainties connected with these numerical estimates, especially concerning the tropical emissions.
Recent work by Seiler and Fishman (1981) has identified seasonal variations in mid-latitudes with CO maxima occurring during the winter and CO minima during the summer months. This behaviour can be explained by the much more pronounced photochemical destruction of CO by reaction with OH in summer, when this radical is calculated to be much more abundant than during the winter season. This seasonal behavior may prove to be very useful in deriving better information on the natural contributions of CO to the atmosphere from the oxidation of the non-methane hydrocarbons that are also emitted by trees at maximum rates during summer.
The
annual destruction rate of methane in the atmosphere is calculated to be
equal to 4 x 1014 g CH4 with an uncertainty range
of maybe 2
6 x 1014
g CH4. This calculation is
based on an average tropospheric OH concentration of about 6 x 1015
molecules cm-3, which has an uncertainty of a factor of two
(Lovelock, 1977; Singh et al., 1979; Derwent and Eggleton, 1981;
Gidel et al., 1982) in accordance with the methylchloroform
balance of the atmosphere. As uptake of methane by microbiological
processes in soils and waters has never been found to be significant (Ehhalt,
1974; Seiler, private communication), this rules against the
substantially larger sources of methane that have been proposed by
Ehhalt (1974) and recently by Sheppard et al. (1981). From this I
derived the tentative budget of the biological sources of methane, which
is presented in Table 3.1. A substantial portion of the methane will be
oxidized in the atmosphere to CO, but in the absence of enough NO there
will be a rain-out of about 1014 g C as CH3O2H.
It appears that several sources contribute comparable quantities of CH4
to the atmosphere, and some of these sources are expanding world-wide.
For the period 1972
1978
(FAO, 1975, 1977, 1980), the cattle population
increased by 1.2% annually, the rice paddy area by 1.7% and the rice
production by 4.6% per year. Of particular importance as an interaction
between biogeochemical cycles are the observations by Cicerone and Shetter (1981)
who observed a more than fourfold enhancement in CH4 yields
when rice fields were supplied with nitrogen fertilizer. Nevertheless,
their global estimate of CH4 emissions from rice fields is
less than 6 x 1013 g per year. It is interesting to note that
biomass burning is also a significant source of methane to the
atmosphere, supplying between 30 and 110 Tg annually (Crutzen et al.,
1979). It is quite likely that the extent of burning has also grown
substantially during the past decade, but no reliable statistics are
available. An additional production of methane of maybe 1.5 x 1014
g CH4 per year takes place in the digestive systems of termites
during the decay of wood (Zimmerman et al., 1982). This must
still be shown by field measurements.
An important, abiological source of CH4 is venting and leakage of natural gas. Current world-wide natural gas consumption amounts to about 1015 g CH4/yr. A world-wide average leakage rate of only 2% would supply 2 x 1013 g CH4 annually to the atmosphere. A good statistical evaluation of the leakage rate has not been published, and the 2% number based on unofficial information from gas supply companies is rather uncertain.
Observations
by Rasmussen and Khalil (1981) have shown, an annual global increase in
methane by about 2% during 1978
1980. This increase has also been
discovered by Seiler (private communication) from data extending back to
1976. Spectroscopic measurements from the Jungfraujoch in Switzerland
seem to rule out an increase by more than 10% during the time period
1955
1977 (Zander, private communication), so that the increase in
atmospheric methane may only have been of more recent dates. Carbon
isotope ratio measurements of CH4 and its potential
atmospheric sources may be of great value in identifying the source of
the increase in atmospheric CH4 over the past years (Rust,
1981; Stevens and Rust, 1981). Because of the important role of methane
in both stratospheric and tropospheric photochemistry, an increase in CH4
will significantly affect air chemistry. Furthermore, methane plays a
role in the earth's radiation budget (Wang et al., 1976).
3.4.4 Isoprene and Terpenes
Isoprene and
terpenes seem to be the main volatile organic compounds that are emitted
by trees (Went, 1960; Zimmerman et al., 1978). They are important
because they may be converted to CO. Their residence time in the
atmosphere is only a few hours. Extrapolating from field measurements of
emissions made in the U.S.A., Zimmerman et al. (1978) estimated
isoprene and terpene emission rates of 3.5
1014 and 4.8
1014 g C/yr respectively. These are uncertain by a factor of
two and it may not be excluded that other hydrocarbon gases are also
emitted in important quantities in the tropics.
Virtually nothing is known about the oxidation paths of these compounds in the atmosphere. As discussed for methane, it appears that the availability of nitric oxide is an important factor that determines the routes and time constants of their oxidation in the atmosphere. If too little NO is present in the air, it is possible that many photochemically rather long-lived and water-soluble gaseous intermediates (e.g. organic peroxides and alcohols) are formed. These intermediates may be removed by precipitation so that there is no guarantee that the efficiency of CO formation from each emitted carbon atom will be close to unity. Conversely, any future additions of NO from industry and fires to the boundary layer of the tropical forests could substantially shorten the time needed to break down C5H8 and C10H16 via aldehydes to carbon monoxide. This may have implications for the future atmospheric CO distribution. The accompanying effects on ozone formation have already been discussed. There may even exist a potential for photochemical smog formation under stable meteorological conditions during the dry season in the trophics.
3.5.1 Nitric Oxide, Nitrogen Dioxide and Nitric Acid
I group these gases together because photochemical reactions establish an equilibrium between NOx and NO2, after which HNO3 is formed via reaction (R10). The source of nitric oxide to the troposphere will be discussed in the following sections.A. High Temperature Combustion
In the SCOPE 7
report the global source of NO was estimated at 23 Tg
N in 1975 (Söderlund and Svensson, 1976). These estimates were obtained
by an extrapolation of earlier 1965 emission estimates of 15 Tg N by
Robinson and Robbins (1968). On the other hand, an analysis of NOx
emissions recently made by Böttger et al. (1980), estimates the
global NOx production from combustion engines to range
between 8.2 and 18.5 Tg N/yr. For specific continents and regions more
detailed analyses have been compiled by Smith (1980). For Western
Europe, Smith reports an annual atmospheric emission rate of about 2 Tg
N. For the U.S.A. and Japan, production rates were estimated at 6.6 and
0.7 Tg N/yr respectively. A consideration of these more recent figures
casts some doubt on the emission estimates by Söderlund and Svensson
(1976) and demonstrates clearly an unsatisfactory state of affairs that
calls for more complete and up-dated analyses of the industrial NOx
production rates. Besides, because of the short lifetime of NOx
in the atmosphere, regional budgets are important for pollution studies.
Globally, we will adopt here a range of 12
20 Tg N per year as the NOx
production rate estimate from industrial high temperature combustion
processes.
Considerable attention has recently also been given to the emissions of NOx by subsonic aircraft above 9 km in the Northern Hemisphere, which is estimated at 0.25 Tg N/yr. (Liu et al., 1980). Although this source of NO is much smaller than that produced by all other fossil fuel combustion processes, the NOx will reside in the atmosphere much longer than the nitric oxide that is produced at low altitudes, because of a lower probability of uptake of HNO3 in cloud water. Liu et al. (1980) postulated, therefore, that the aircraft nitric oxide would contribute significantly to the NOx concentrations in the upper troposphere together with the nitric oxide that is of stratospheric origin. They also postulated that these sources of NOx would exert a considerable effect on the tropospheric ozone. The validity of this argument also depends, however, on the efficiency of transfer of the industrial NO and NO2 from the ground to the upper troposphere. As NO and NO2 are not very soluble and do not react in water (Lee and Schwartz, 1981), such transport may occur by occasional vigorous overturning of the troposphere during frontal passages and thunderstorms. This cannot be estimated by the current 1-D and 2-D models of the atmosphere that consider only averaged motions and average deviations thereof, and that thereby may grossly under-estimate the transfer of photochemically reactive gases to the middle and upper troposphere.
B. Biomass Burning in the Tropics
The
nitric oxide resulting from this process is mainly a product of the
oxidation of the fixed nitrogen that was already bound in the biomas.
This source of nitric oxide is hard to estimate, but based on the
studies by Crutzen et al. (1979) and by Seiler and Crutzen
(1980), it should be of the order of 20 Tg N/yr with about a factor of
two uncertainty. This may only represent 30% of all fixed nitrogen that
is contained in the burned biomass, so that there remains the
possibility of large atmospheric sources of other nitrogenous gases. One
of these gases is N2O; other possibilities are ammonia,
hydrogen cyanide (HCN), and other nitriles. The presence of HCN in the
atmosphere was predicted by Crutzen et al. (1979), because of a
long atmospheric residence time and the likelihood of a substantial
atmospheric source from biomass burning (Schmeltz and Hoffmann, 1977).
Its presence in the atmosphere above 12 km at an average volume mixing
ratio of 0.17 ppbv has recently been reported (Coffey et al., 1981b).
The reaction coefficient of HCN with OH varies from about 3 x 10-14cm3
molecule-1 s-1 at ground level to slower than 7 x
10-15cm3 molecule-1 s-1 above
12 km (Fritz et al., 1981). This means that the oxidation of HCN
in the atmosphere can at most yield 0.1 Tg N/yr of NOx,
which is quite insignificant. Rain-out of HCN in the atmosphere may
likewise be neglected because of insufficient solubility of HCN in water
(Landolt-Börnstein, 1962), so that only uptake at the earth's surface
can be a significant sink for atmospheric HCN. With a maximum deposition
velocity of about 0.5
1 cm/s on the ocean and at land (Liss and Slater,
1974), the transfer of fixed nitrogen from the atmosphere is at most
about 10 Tg N/yr, which may be of ecological significance provided HCN
can be used efficiently as a fixed nitrogen source.
C. Lightning
For this source of
NO widely different estimates ranging from 4.2 TgN/yr
(Tuck, 1976) to 40 TgN/yr (Chameides et al., 1977) were published
several years ago. Most recent estimates are about 3
4
TgN/yr (Dawson,
1980; Hill et al., 1980), or even 1.8 TgN/yr (Levine et al., 1980).
I estimate a wide range of possible values of 1
10 Tg N/yr, for which
the more recent estimates, being based on better statistics on lightning
stroke energy dissipation and lightning stroke frequency, are more
heavily weighted.
This
source still awaits careful evaluation. Laboratory studies have shown
that emission of NOx is much dependent on soil acidity
(Nelson and Bremner, 1970). The SCOPE 7 report (Söderlund and Svensson,
1976) gives a range of 1
14 Tg N/yr for global emission, based on two
Russian studies, while Galbally and Roy (1978) propose 10 Tg N/year as a
global rate extrapolating from the results of their box measurements on
some Australian soils. With so little new information available, I
propose a range of 1
15 Tg N/yr for the NOx release
from soils, which includes the possibility of no appreciable emission at
all.
E. Ocean Release
Nitric oxide is also released from the ocean surface as a result of nitrite photolysis. The source strength has been estimated at 0.15 Tg N/yr (Zafiriou and McFarland, 1981)
F. Stratospheric Production of NO from the Oxidation of N2O
There are many estimates available for this source of NO, depending on the assumptions which are made about the stratospheric distribution of N2O, of which there are too few measurements. The assumptions about the tropical distributions of N2O are especially critical in making these estimates. From the analysis of one balloon flight at 9°N and several observations at other latitudes, Schmeltekopf et al. (1977) derived an average global, vertically integrated, production rate of NO of 1.6 Tg N/yr. The measured profiles of N2O with high stratospheric N2O concentrations have been confirmed by three other equatorial flights by the same research group (Goldan et al., 1980). However, the estimate of Schmeltekopf et al. (1977) is too high by a factor of two, because these workers considered the photochemical process to last for 24 hours each day. The analysis by Johnston et al. (1979) avoided this error and led to a production of 1 Tg N/yr. This may also be somewhat on the high side, however, as no proper account could be taken of the temperature dependence of O(1D) quantum yield in O3 photolysis near 310 nm. If the estimate by Johnston et al. (1979) has an uncertainty of about 40%, the production of NO from N2O oxidation may range between 0.7 and 1.4 Tg N/yr. This source determines the abundance of NO in the stratosphere and is critical for stratospheric ozone chemistry. In polar regions, galactic cosmic rays produce NO at rates between 0.024 and 0.036 Tg N annually, depending of the phase of the solar cycle. Sporadic solar cosmic ray events may occasional