Peroxy radical chemistry and the control of ozone photochemistry at Mace Head, Ireland during the summer of 2002
Peroxy radical (HO<sub>2</sub>+ΣRO<sub>2</sub>) measurements, using the PEroxy Radical Chemical Amplification (PERCA) technique at the North Atlantic Marine Boundary Layer EXperiment (NAMBLEX) at Mace Head in summer 2002, are presented and put into the context of ma...
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doaj-0f2766318f684008b91a09cf99b0620b2020-11-24T21:08:52ZengCopernicus PublicationsAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics1680-73161680-73242006-01-016821932214Peroxy radical chemistry and the control of ozone photochemistry at Mace Head, Ireland during the summer of 2002Z. L. FlemingP. S. MonksA. R. RickardA. R. RickardD. E. HeardW. J. BlossP. W. SeakinsT. J. StillR. SommarivaM. J. PillingR. MorganT. J. GreenN. BroughG. P. MillsS. A. PenkettA. C. LewisJ. D. LeeA. Saiz-LopezJ. M. C. PlanePeroxy radical (HO<sub>2</sub>+ΣRO<sub>2</sub>) measurements, using the PEroxy Radical Chemical Amplification (PERCA) technique at the North Atlantic Marine Boundary Layer EXperiment (NAMBLEX) at Mace Head in summer 2002, are presented and put into the context of marine, boundary-layer chemistry. A suite of other chemical parameters (NO, NO<sub>2</sub>, NO<sub>3</sub>, CO, CH<sub>4</sub>, O<sub>3</sub>, VOCs, peroxides), photolysis frequencies and meteorological measurements, are used to present a detailed analysis of the role of peroxy radicals in tropospheric oxidation cycles and ozone formation. Under the range of conditions encountered the peroxy radical daily maxima varied from 10 to 40 pptv. The diurnal cycles showed an asymmetric shape typically shifted to the afternoon. Using a box model based on the master chemical mechanism the average model measurement agreement was 2.5 across the campaign. The addition of halogen oxides to the model increases the level of model/measurement agreement, apparently by respeciation of HO<sub>x</sub>. A good correlation exists between <i>j</i>(HCHO).[HCHO] and the peroxy radicals indicative of the importance of HCHO in the remote atmosphere as a HO<sub>x</sub> source, particularly in the afternoon. The peroxy radicals showed a strong dependence on [NO<sub>2</sub>] with a break point at 0.1 ppbv, where the radicals increased concomitantly with the reactive VOC loading, this is a lower value than seen at representative urban campaigns. The HO<sub>2</sub>/(HO<sub>2</sub>+ΣRO<sub>2</sub>) ratios are dependent on [NO<sub>x</sub>] ranging between 0.2 and 0.6, with the ratio increasing linearly with NO<sub>x</sub>. Significant night-time levels of peroxy radicals were measured up to 25 pptv. The contribution of ozone-alkenes and NO<sub>3</sub>-alkene chemistry to night-time peroxy radical production was shown to be on average 59 and 41%. The campaign mean net ozone production rate was 0.11±0.3 ppbv h<sup>-1</sup>. The ozone production rate was strongly dependent on [NO] having linear sensitivity (dln(P(O<sub>3</sub>))/dln(NO)=1.0). The results imply that the N(O<sub>3</sub>) (the in-situ net photochemical rate of ozone production/destruction) will be strongly sensitive in the marine boundary layer to small changes in [NO] which has ramifications for changing NO<sub>x</sub> loadings in the European continental boundary layer.http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/6/2193/2006/acp-6-2193-2006.pdf |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Z. L. Fleming P. S. Monks A. R. Rickard A. R. Rickard D. E. Heard W. J. Bloss P. W. Seakins T. J. Still R. Sommariva M. J. Pilling R. Morgan T. J. Green N. Brough G. P. Mills S. A. Penkett A. C. Lewis J. D. Lee A. Saiz-Lopez J. M. C. Plane |
spellingShingle |
Z. L. Fleming P. S. Monks A. R. Rickard A. R. Rickard D. E. Heard W. J. Bloss P. W. Seakins T. J. Still R. Sommariva M. J. Pilling R. Morgan T. J. Green N. Brough G. P. Mills S. A. Penkett A. C. Lewis J. D. Lee A. Saiz-Lopez J. M. C. Plane Peroxy radical chemistry and the control of ozone photochemistry at Mace Head, Ireland during the summer of 2002 Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics |
author_facet |
Z. L. Fleming P. S. Monks A. R. Rickard A. R. Rickard D. E. Heard W. J. Bloss P. W. Seakins T. J. Still R. Sommariva M. J. Pilling R. Morgan T. J. Green N. Brough G. P. Mills S. A. Penkett A. C. Lewis J. D. Lee A. Saiz-Lopez J. M. C. Plane |
author_sort |
Z. L. Fleming |
title |
Peroxy radical chemistry and the control of ozone photochemistry at Mace Head, Ireland during the summer of 2002 |
title_short |
Peroxy radical chemistry and the control of ozone photochemistry at Mace Head, Ireland during the summer of 2002 |
title_full |
Peroxy radical chemistry and the control of ozone photochemistry at Mace Head, Ireland during the summer of 2002 |
title_fullStr |
Peroxy radical chemistry and the control of ozone photochemistry at Mace Head, Ireland during the summer of 2002 |
title_full_unstemmed |
Peroxy radical chemistry and the control of ozone photochemistry at Mace Head, Ireland during the summer of 2002 |
title_sort |
peroxy radical chemistry and the control of ozone photochemistry at mace head, ireland during the summer of 2002 |
publisher |
Copernicus Publications |
series |
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics |
issn |
1680-7316 1680-7324 |
publishDate |
2006-01-01 |
description |
Peroxy radical (HO<sub>2</sub>+ΣRO<sub>2</sub>) measurements, using the PEroxy Radical Chemical Amplification (PERCA) technique at the North Atlantic Marine Boundary Layer EXperiment (NAMBLEX) at Mace Head in summer 2002, are presented and put into the context of marine, boundary-layer chemistry. A suite of other chemical parameters (NO, NO<sub>2</sub>, NO<sub>3</sub>, CO, CH<sub>4</sub>, O<sub>3</sub>, VOCs, peroxides), photolysis frequencies and meteorological measurements, are used to present a detailed analysis of the role of peroxy radicals in tropospheric oxidation cycles and ozone formation. Under the range of conditions encountered the peroxy radical daily maxima varied from 10 to 40 pptv. The diurnal cycles showed an asymmetric shape typically shifted to the afternoon. Using a box model based on the master chemical mechanism the average model measurement agreement was 2.5 across the campaign. The addition of halogen oxides to the model increases the level of model/measurement agreement, apparently by respeciation of HO<sub>x</sub>. A good correlation exists between <i>j</i>(HCHO).[HCHO] and the peroxy radicals indicative of the importance of HCHO in the remote atmosphere as a HO<sub>x</sub> source, particularly in the afternoon. The peroxy radicals showed a strong dependence on [NO<sub>2</sub>] with a break point at 0.1 ppbv, where the radicals increased concomitantly with the reactive VOC loading, this is a lower value than seen at representative urban campaigns. The HO<sub>2</sub>/(HO<sub>2</sub>+ΣRO<sub>2</sub>) ratios are dependent on [NO<sub>x</sub>] ranging between 0.2 and 0.6, with the ratio increasing linearly with NO<sub>x</sub>. Significant night-time levels of peroxy radicals were measured up to 25 pptv. The contribution of ozone-alkenes and NO<sub>3</sub>-alkene chemistry to night-time peroxy radical production was shown to be on average 59 and 41%. The campaign mean net ozone production rate was 0.11±0.3 ppbv h<sup>-1</sup>. The ozone production rate was strongly dependent on [NO] having linear sensitivity (dln(P(O<sub>3</sub>))/dln(NO)=1.0). The results imply that the N(O<sub>3</sub>) (the in-situ net photochemical rate of ozone production/destruction) will be strongly sensitive in the marine boundary layer to small changes in [NO] which has ramifications for changing NO<sub>x</sub> loadings in the European continental boundary layer. |
url |
http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/6/2193/2006/acp-6-2193-2006.pdf |
work_keys_str_mv |
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