Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byNoreen Osborne Modified over 9 years ago
1
Atmospheric Chemistry Sasha Madronich National Center for Atmospheric Research Boulder, Colorado USA Boulder, 1 June 2009
2
Earth’s Atmosphere Composition 78% nitrogen 21% oxygen 1-2% water (gas, liquid, ice) trace amounts (<< 1%) of many other species, some natural and some “pollutants” Reactivity dominated by oxygen chemistry solar photons To understand fate of pollutants, must first understand oxygen photochemistry 2
3
Pure Oxygen Species 3
4
Energetics of Oxygen in the Atmosphere H f (298K) kcal mol -1 Excited atomsO*( 1 D)104.9 Ground state atomsO ( 3 P)59.6 OzoneO 3 34.1 “Normal” moleculesO 2 0 4 Increasing stability
5
Atmospheric Oxygen Thermodynamic vs. Actual 5 O3O3 O O*
6
Photochemistry Thermodynamics alone cannot explain atmospheric amounts of O 3, O, O* Need –energy input, e.g. O 2 + h O + O ( < 242 nm) –chemical reactions, e.g. O + O 2 (+ M) O 3 (+ M) = Photochemistry 6
8
Stratospheric Ozone Chemistry The Only Production: O 2 + h ( < 242 nm) O + O Chapman 1930 O + O 2 + M O 3 + M Several Destruction Reactions: Pure oxygen chemistry:O 3 + h ( < 800 nm) O + O 2 Chapman 1930 O + O 3 2 O 2 Catalytic Cycles: Odd hydrogen (HOx = OH + HO 2 )O 3 + OH O 2 + HO 2 Bates and Nicolet 1950 O + HO 2 O 2 + OH O 3 + HO 2 2 O 2 + OH Odd nitrogen (NOx = NO + NO 2 )O 3 + NO O 2 + NO 2 Crutzen 1970 O + NO 2 O 2 + NO Halogens (Cl, Br) O 3 + Cl O 2 + ClO Rowland and Molina 1974 O + ClO O 2 + Cl 8
9
COLUMN OZONE TRENDS, % 9 http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/stratosphere/winter_bulletins/sh_07/Fig_5.gif
10
10 SOLAR SPECTRUM UNEP, 2002 O 2 and O 3 absorb all UV-C ( <280 nm) before it reaches the troposphere
11
Tropospheric Ozone Formation - How? Laboratory studies show that O 3 is made almost exclusively by the reaction: O 2 + O + M O 3 + M But no tropospheric UV-C radiation to break O 2 O 2 + h ( < 242 nm) O + O Haagen-Smit(1950s) - Los Angeles smog: Urban ozone (O 3 ) is generated when air containing hydrocarbons and nitrogen oxides (NOx = NO + NO 2 ) is exposed to tropospheric UV radiation
12
The Nitrogen Family N nitrogen atoms – negligible at room T N 2 molecular nitrogen Zeldovich mechanism at high T (flames, engines, lightning): O 2 + heat O + O O + N 2 N + NO N + O 2 O + NO (NO is the cross-product of scrambling N 2 and O 2 at high T) Nitrogen oxides : NOx ≡ NO + NO 2 NOnitric oxide is 90-95% of direct emissions NO 2 nitrogen dioxide is 5-10% of direct emissions, but more is made from NO + oxidants in the atmosphere 12
13
(some other nitrogen species) NO 3 nitrate radical N 2 O 5 dinitrogen tetroxide HONOnitrous acid HONO 2 nitric acid CH 3 ONO 2 methyl nitrate N 2 Onitrous oxide (laughing gas) NH 3 ammonia NH 2 CH 3 methyl amine 13
14
14 Tropospheric O 3 Formation - 2 NO 2 photo-dissociation is the source of O atoms that make tropospheric O 3 NO 2 + h ( < 420 nm) NO + O O + O 2 + M O 3 + M _____________________________________________ Net: NO 2 + h + O 2 NO + O 3
15
CALCULATION OF PHOTODISSOCIATION COEFFICIENTS J (s -1 ) = F( ) d F( ) = spectral actinic flux, quanta cm -2 s -1 nm -1 probability of photon near molecule. absorption cross section, cm 2 molec -1 probability that photon is absorbed. photodissociation quantum yield, molec quanta -1 probability that absorbed photon causes dissociation.
16
NO 2 + h ( < 420 nm) NO + O 16 Mexico City, surface, March 2006
17
17 Tropospheric O 3 Formation - 3 NO 2 photo-dissociation makes some O 3, but not enough. Two problems: Usually O 3 ~ 20 - 500 ppb >> NO 2 ~ 1 – 10 ppb Reversal by the reaction: NO + O 3 NO 2 + O 2
18
18 Tropospheric O 3 Formation - 4 Initiation by UV radiation (Levy, 1970): O 3 + h ( < 330 nm) O*( 1 D) + O 2 O*( 1 D) + H 2 O OH + OH Hydrocarbon consumption (oxygen entry point): OH + RH R + H 2 O R + O 2 + M ROO + M Single-bonded oxygen transferred to NOx: ROO + NO RO + NO 2 NOx gives up oxygen atoms (as before): NO 2 + h ( < 420 nm) NO + O O + O 2 + M O 3 + M
19
19 Tropospheric O 3 Formation - 5 Propagation RO + O 2 R’CO + HOO HOO + NO OH + NO 2 every NO NO 2 conversion makes O 3 except NO + O 3 NO 2 + O 2 Termination OH + NO 2 + M HNO 3 + M HOO + HOO + M H 2 O 2 + M HOO + O 3 OH + 2 O 2
20
20 Initiation by photo-dissociation O 3 + h + H 2 O 2 OH + O 2 Oxidation of hydrocarbons OH + RH + O 2 + M ROO + H 2 O + M NO NO 2 conversions ROO + NO RO + NO 2 O 3 + NO NO 2 + O 2 Actual O 3 formation NO 2 + h + O 2 O 3 + NO Propagation RO + O 2 HOO + R’CO HOO + NO OH + NO 2 Termination OH + NO 2 + M HNO 3 + M HOO + HOO + M H 2 O 2 + O 2 + M HOO + O 3 OH + 2 O 2 Summary of Key Steps In Tropospheric O 3 Formation
21
NOx Photo-stationary State NO 2 + h NO + O 3 J NO2 NO + O 3 NO 2 + O 2 k 1 NO + HO 2 NO 2 + OHk 2 NO + RO 2 NO 2 + ROk 3 d[NO]/dt = +J NO2 [NO 2 ] – [NO](k 1 [O 3 ]+k 2 [HO 2 ]+k 3 [RO 2 ]) ~ 0 at steady state ≡ J NO2 [NO 2 ] / (k 1 [NO][O 3 ]) ~ 1 + (k 2 [HO 2 ]+k 3 [RO 2 ]) /k 1 [O 3 ] Can use measurements of to estimate [HO 2 ] + [RO 2 ] and instantaneous O 3 production 21
22
DIURNAL AND WEEKLY VARIATIONS Surface network in Mexico City 22 Stephens et al., ACP 2008
23
23
24
24 Tropospheric Chemical Mechanisms This talk: 10 reactions Typical 3D model used for air quality: 100 - 200 reactions Typical 0D (box) models used for sensitivity studies: 5,000 - 10,000 reactions Fully explicit (computer-generated) mechanisms: 10 6 - 10 7 reactions
25
Atmospheric Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs): Hydrocarbons Alkanes CH 4 CH 3 CH 3 CH 2 CH 3 C 4 H 10 (2 isomers) C 5 H 12 (3 isomers) C 6 H 14 (5 isomers) C 7 H 16 (9 isomers) C 8 H 18 (18 isomers) …. methane ethane propane butane pentane hexane heptane octane …. 25
26
Atmospheric VOC’s: Hydrocarbons - 2 Alkenes CH 2 =CH 2 CH 2 =CHCH 3 … CH 2 =C(CH 3 )CH=CH 3 Aromatics C 6 H 6 C 6 H 5 CH 3 C 6 H 5 (CH 3 ) 2 (3 isomers) … Terpenes C 10 H 16 ethene (ethylene) propene (propylene) … 2-methyl 1,3 butadiene (isoprene) benzene toluene xylenes … -pinine, -pinine … 26
27
Global Hydrocarbon Emissions Tg C yr -1 IsopreneTerpenesC2H6C2H6 C3H8C3H8 C 4 H 10 C2H4C2H4 C3H6C3H6 C2H2C2H2 BenzeneToluene Fossil fuel - - 4.8 4.9 8.3 8.6 2.3 4.6 13.7 Biomass burning - - 5.6 3.3 1.7 8.6 4.3 1.8 2.8 1.8 Vegetation 503 123 4.0 4.1 2.5 8.6 - - - Oceans - - 0.8 1.1 - 1.6 1.4 - - - TOTAL 503 123 15.2 13.4 12.5 27.4 22.9 4.1 7.4 15.5 27 Ehhalt, 1999 CH 4 ~ 500 – 600 Tg CH 4 yr -1 [IPCC, 2001]
28
Atmospheric VOC’s: Substituted Hydrocarbons Alcohols, -OH –methanol, CH 3 OH –ethanol, CH 3 CH 2 OH Aldehydes, -CHO –formaldehyde,CH 2 O –acetaldehyde, CH 3 CHO Ketones, -CO- –acetone, CH 3 COCH 3 –MEK, CH 3 COCH 2 CH 3 Carboxylic acids, -CO(OH) –formic, HCO(OH) –acetic, CH 3 CO(OOH) Organic hydroperoxides, -OOH –methyl hydroperoxide, CH 3 (OOH) Organic peroxy acids, -CO(OOH) –peracetic, CH 3 CO(OOH) Organic nitrates, -ONO 2 –methyl nitrate, CH 3 (ONO 2 ) –Ethyl nitrate, CH 3 CH 2 (ONO 2 ) Peroxy nitrates, -OONO 2 –methyl peroxy nitrate, CH 3 (OONO 2 ) Acyl peroxy nitrates, -CO(OONO 2 ) –PAN, CH 3 CO(OONO 2 ) 28
29
Atmospheric Organic Radicals Alkyl (carbon-centered) CH 3 methyl CH 2 CH 3 ethyl CH 2 CH 2 CH 3 propyl Peroxy, -OO CH 3 OO methyl peroxy CH 3 CH 2 OO ethyl peroxy Alkoxy, -O CH 3 O methoxy CH 3 CH 2 O ethoxy Acyl, CO(OO ) CH 3 CO(OO )acetyl Criegee, C(OO ) CH 2 OO from O 3 + C 2 H 4 CH 3 CHOO from O 3 + C 3 H 6 29
30
General Hydrocarbon Reaction Patterns Short-chain compounds tend to have unique behavior, and must be considered individually. Longer-chain compounds are quite alike within each family (e.g. all aldehydes). Kinetics and mechanisms can be adjusted for chain length and substitutions (structure-activity relations). 30
31
31 RH RR ROO RO R’CHO CO 2 + H 2 O ROOHRONO 2 … OH, O 3, NO 3 O2O2 NO HO 2 h h O 2, heat OH, O 3, NO 3 OH Generalized Oxidation Sequence of Hydrocarbons
32
OH + Hydrocarbon Reactions Abstraction of H OH + CH 3 CH 3 CH 3 CH 2 …followed immediately by CH 3 CH 2 + O 2 + M CH 3 CH 2 OO + M Addition to double bonds OH + CH 2 =CH 2 CH 2 (OH)CH 2 …followed immediately by CH 2 (OH)CH 2 + O 2 + M CH 3 (OH)CH 2 OO + M 32
33
O 3 + Hydrocarbon Reactions Ozone addition across double bond O 3 + CH 2 =CH 2 CH 2 – CH 2 CH 2 O + ( CH 2 OO )* Fate of excited Criegee diradical: ( CH 2 OO )* CO + H 2 O CO 2 + H 2 CO 2 + 2 H … + M CH 2 OO (stabilized Criegee diradical) CH 2 OO + (H 2 O, NO, NO 2, SO 2 ) Products 33 O OO
34
NO 3 + VOC Reactions H atom abstraction: CH 3 CHO + NO 3 CH 3 CO + HNO 3 CH 3 CO + O 2 + M CH 3 CO(OO ) + M Addition to double bond: CH 2 =CH 2 + NO 3 + M CH 2 (ONO 2 )CH 2 + M CH 2 (ONO 2 )CH 2 + O 2 + M CH 2 (ONO 2 )CH 2 (OO ) + M 34
35
Peroxy Radical Reactions - 1 with NO ROO + NO RO + NO 2 ROO + NO + M RONO 2 + M with NO 2 ROO + NO 2 + M ROONO 2 + M RCO(OO ) + NO 2 + M RCO(OONO 2 ) + M 35
36
Peroxy Radical Reactions - 2 with HO 2 ROO + HOO ROOH + O 2 RCO(OO ) + HOO RCO(OOH) + O 2 with other organic peroxy radicals, e.g. CH 3 CH 2 OO + CH 3 OO radical channel CH 3 CH 2 O + CH 3 O + O 2 molecular channel 1 CH 3 CH 2 OH + CH 2 O + O 2 molecular channel 2 CH 3 CHO + CH 3 OH + O 2 36
37
Alkoxy Radical Reactions with O 2, e.g. CH 3 CH 2 O + O 2 CH 3 CHO + HOO CH 3 CH(O )CH 3 + O 2 CH 3 COCH 3 + HOO thermal decomposition, e.g. CH 2 CH(O )CH 2 OH + M CH 3 CHO + CH 2 OH + M isomerization, e.g. CH 3 CH(O )CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 CH 3 CH 3 CH(OH)CH 2 CH 2 CHCH 3 37
38
Reactions of Partly Oxidized Species OH, O 3, and NO 3 reactions as with precursor hydrocarbons photolysis important for –aldehydes –ketones –peroxides –alkyl nitrates –but not for alcohols or carboxylic acids thermal decomposition for peroxy nitrates 38
39
Simplified Mechanism for Pentane (C 5 H 12 ) Multiple NO NO 2 conversions produce O 3 Organic nitrates allow long-range transport of NOx Radical sinks: Some are temporary, producing HOx later Some have low vapor pressures, can make organic aerosols
40
40 Consequences of tropospheric chemistry - 1 Formation of O 3 Urban: 100-500 ppb Regional: 50-100 ppb Global background increase 10-20 ppb 35-45 ppb in NH 10-20 ppb 25-35 ppb in SH Damage to health and vegetation e.g. $3.5B-6.1B /yr in US for 8 major crops (Murphy, 1999) Greenhouse role of O 3 Changes in global oxidation capacity
41
EPA, 2004
42
42 Consequences of tropospheric chemistry - 2 Formation of peroxides and acids: HO 2 + HO 2 H 2 O 2 + O 2 OH + NO 2 + M HNO 3 + M OH + SO 2 … H 2 SO 4 H 2 O 2 (aq) + SO 2 (aq) … H 2 SO 4 (aq) Damage to vegetation, lakes, and buildings (acid precipitation) Sulfate aerosol formation (visibility, precipitation, direct and indirect radiative forcing of climate)
43
43 Consequences of tropospheric chemistry - 3 Products of hydrocarbon oxidation CO 2 (minor compared to direct emissions) CO (~ 1/3 of total emissions) Oxygenated organics:aldehydes, ketones, alcohols, organic acids, nitrates, peroxides Damage to health, vegetation Secondary organic aerosol formation (health, visibility, meteorology, direct and indirect climate forcing) Changes in global oxidation capacity
44
Organic aerosol > Sulfate in most observations Zhang et al., GRL 2007
45
Human Health Impacts of Particles For 2002 (World Health Organization, 2007): World: 865,000 deaths per year 1.0 DALY* /1000 capita per year * DALY = Disability-Adjusted Lost Years U.S.: 41,200 deaths per year 0.8 DALY /1000 capita per year
46
46 Global Oxidation (self-cleaning) Capacity Solar UV radiation Oxidation, e.g.: CH 4 + OH … CO 2 + H 2 O Insoluble Soluble Emissions CH 4 CmHnCmHn SO 2 NO CO NO 2 Halocarbons Deposition (dry, wet) HNO 3, NO 3 - H 2 SO 4, SO 4 = HCl, Cl - Carboxylic acids
47
47 Consequences of tropospheric chemistry - 4 Oxidizing Capacity: Increase because of increasing emissions of NOx? Increase because of increasing UV radiation? or Decrease because of increasing emissions of CO, C m H n, SO 2, and other reduced compounds? Decreased OH (oxidizing capacity) implies generally higher amounts of most pollutants including: Higher amounts of greenhouse gases Higher amounts of substances that deplete the ozone layer More global spread
48
48 TROPOSPHERIC OXIDIZING (SELF-CLEANING) CAPACITY Log 10 [OH] - Global Box Model Different OH regimes 10 6 10 5 10 4 10 3 10 2 10 7 10 1 10 0 F CH4, cm -3 s -1 F NO, cm -3 s -1 F O3 =5e4 cm -3 s -1, F CO =1e5 cm -3 s -1 ~current Madronich and Hess, 1993 pre- industrial future?
49
FUTURE TROPOSPHERIC O 3 : MODELS DISAGREE IPCC 2001
50
SUMMARY Stratospheric chemistry is relatively simple: Oxygen photo-dissociation Ozone catalytic destruction Impacts: climate, surface UV radiation Tropospheric chemistry is complex, non-linear: Ozone made from UV, NOx, and HCs Many hydrocarbons (biogenic and anthropogenic) Aerosols: most are made in atmosphere by condensation of gas phase species Many impacts: health, ecosystems, meteorology, climate 50
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.