Deriving global OH abundance and atmospheric lifetimes for long-lived gases: A search for CH3CCl3 alternatives

Journal Article
Deriving global OH abundance and atmospheric lifetimes for long-lived gases: A search for CH3CCl3 alternatives
Liang, Q., M.P. Chipperfield, E.L. Fleming, N.L. Abraham, P. Braesicke, J.B. Burkholder, J.S. Daniel, S. Dhomse, P.J. Fraser, S.C. Hardiman, C.H. Jackman, D.E. Kinnison, P.B. Krummel, S.A. Montzka, O. Morgenstern, A. McCulloch, J. Muhle, P.A. Newman, V.L. Orkin, G. Pitari, R. G. Prinn, M. Rigby, E. Rozanov, A. Stenke, F. Tummon, G.J.M. Velders, D. Visioni and R.F. Weiss (2017)
Journal of Geophysical Research - Atmospheres, 122(21): 11,914–11,933

Abstract/Summary:

An accurate estimate of global hydroxyl radical (OH) abundance is important for projections of air quality, climate, and stratospheric ozone recovery. As the atmospheric mixing ratios of methyl chloroform (CH3CCl3) (MCF), the commonly used OH reference gas, approaches zero, it is important to find alternative approaches to infer atmospheric OH abundance and variability. The lack of global bottom-up emission inventories is the primary obstacle in choosing a MCF alternative. We illustrate that global emissions of long-lived trace gases can be inferred from their observed mixing ratio differences between the Northern Hemisphere (NH) and Southern Hemisphere (SH), given realistic estimates of their NH-SH exchange time, the emission partitioning between the two hemispheres, and the NH versus SH OH abundance ratio. Using the observed long-term trend and emissions derived from the measured hemispheric gradient, the combination of HFC-32 (CH2F2), HFC-134a (CH2FCF3, HFC-152a (CH3CHF2), and HCFC-22 (CHClF2), instead of a single gas, will be useful as a MCF alternative to infer global and hemispheric OH abundance and trace gas lifetimes. The primary assumption on which this multispecies approach relies is that the OH lifetimes can be estimated by scaling the thermal reaction rates of a reference gas at 272 K on global and hemispheric scales. Thus, the derived hemispheric and global OH estimates are forced to reconcile the observed trends and gradient for all four compounds simultaneously. However, currently, observations of these gases from the surface networks do not provide more accurate OH abundance estimate than that from MCF.

Citation:

Liang, Q., M.P. Chipperfield, E.L. Fleming, N.L. Abraham, P. Braesicke, J.B. Burkholder, J.S. Daniel, S. Dhomse, P.J. Fraser, S.C. Hardiman, C.H. Jackman, D.E. Kinnison, P.B. Krummel, S.A. Montzka, O. Morgenstern, A. McCulloch, J. Muhle, P.A. Newman, V.L. Orkin, G. Pitari, R. G. Prinn, M. Rigby, E. Rozanov, A. Stenke, F. Tummon, G.J.M. Velders, D. Visioni and R.F. Weiss (2017): Deriving global OH abundance and atmospheric lifetimes for long-lived gases: A search for CH3CCl3 alternatives. Journal of Geophysical Research - Atmospheres, 122(21): 11,914–11,933 (http://doi.org/10.1002/2017JD026926)
  • Journal Article
Deriving global OH abundance and atmospheric lifetimes for long-lived gases: A search for CH3CCl3 alternatives

Liang, Q., M.P. Chipperfield, E.L. Fleming, N.L. Abraham, P. Braesicke, J.B. Burkholder, J.S. Daniel, S. Dhomse, P.J. Fraser, S.C. Hardiman, C.H. Jackman, D.E. Kinnison, P.B. Krummel, S.A. Montzka, O. Morgenstern, A. McCulloch, J. Muhle, P.A. Newman, V.L. Orkin, G. Pitari, R. G. Prinn, M. Rigby, E. Rozanov, A. Stenke, F. Tummon, G.J.M. Velders, D. Visioni and R.F. Weiss

Abstract/Summary: 

An accurate estimate of global hydroxyl radical (OH) abundance is important for projections of air quality, climate, and stratospheric ozone recovery. As the atmospheric mixing ratios of methyl chloroform (CH3CCl3) (MCF), the commonly used OH reference gas, approaches zero, it is important to find alternative approaches to infer atmospheric OH abundance and variability. The lack of global bottom-up emission inventories is the primary obstacle in choosing a MCF alternative. We illustrate that global emissions of long-lived trace gases can be inferred from their observed mixing ratio differences between the Northern Hemisphere (NH) and Southern Hemisphere (SH), given realistic estimates of their NH-SH exchange time, the emission partitioning between the two hemispheres, and the NH versus SH OH abundance ratio. Using the observed long-term trend and emissions derived from the measured hemispheric gradient, the combination of HFC-32 (CH2F2), HFC-134a (CH2FCF3, HFC-152a (CH3CHF2), and HCFC-22 (CHClF2), instead of a single gas, will be useful as a MCF alternative to infer global and hemispheric OH abundance and trace gas lifetimes. The primary assumption on which this multispecies approach relies is that the OH lifetimes can be estimated by scaling the thermal reaction rates of a reference gas at 272 K on global and hemispheric scales. Thus, the derived hemispheric and global OH estimates are forced to reconcile the observed trends and gradient for all four compounds simultaneously. However, currently, observations of these gases from the surface networks do not provide more accurate OH abundance estimate than that from MCF.

Posted to public: 

Tuesday, February 13, 2018 - 17:15