Seasonality, sources and sinks of C1–C5 alkyl nitrates in the Colorado Front Range

We describe observations of C1 –C5 alkyl nitrates made at the Boulder Atmospheric Observatory in Northern Colorado in winter 2011, spring 2015, and summer 2015. Average mixing ratios of the alkyl nitrates are similar across the seasons, but increased diel variability in summer suggests increased pro...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: A. Abeleira, B. Sive, Robert F. Swarthout, Emily V. Fischer, Y. Zhou, D. K. Farmer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BioOne 2018-06-01
Series:Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.elementascience.org/articles/299
id doaj-6192f5e6fede49459a73844db3b9d34b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6192f5e6fede49459a73844db3b9d34b2020-11-25T00:55:59ZengBioOneElementa: Science of the Anthropocene2325-10262018-06-016110.1525/elementa.299270Seasonality, sources and sinks of C1–C5 alkyl nitrates in the Colorado Front RangeA. Abeleira0B. Sive1Robert F. Swarthout2Emily V. Fischer3Y. Zhou4D. K. Farmer5Department of Chemistry, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, ColoradoNational Park Service, Air Resources Division, Lakewood, ColoradoDepartment of Chemistry, Appalachian State University, Boone, North CarolinaDepartment of Atmospheric Science, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, ColoradoDepartment of Atmospheric Science, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, ColoradoDepartment of Chemistry, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, ColoradoWe describe observations of C1 –C5 alkyl nitrates made at the Boulder Atmospheric Observatory in Northern Colorado in winter 2011, spring 2015, and summer 2015. Average mixing ratios of the alkyl nitrates are similar across the seasons, but increased diel variability in summer suggests increased production balanced by increased loss relative to winter and spring. We use a sequential production-destruction model based on ratios of alkyl nitrates to their parent alkanes to investigate seasonal sources and sinks of C1 –C5 alkyl nitrates. We explore the role of uncertainties in the production and loss kinetic parameters on the interpretation of local atmospheric photochemical aging through the use of a photochemical clock based on the evolution of the ratios of alkyl nitrates to their parent alkanes over time. Photochemical age is typically consistent with hours from sunrise, suggesting that the site experiences well-mixed air masses dominated by daily photochemistry with little carry-over from the previous day or from other locations. Contrary to studies in other locations, we obtain good model-measurement agreement using a newer upper-bound ethyl nitrate branching ratios. This suggests that the efficiency of ethyl nitrate production from ethane oxidation has previously been underestimated, and decreases the relative importance of alkoxy radical decomposition versus ethane photochemistry on ethyl nitrate production. We estimate the dry deposition velocity of methyl nitrates is small and consistent with previous estimates, and that deposition velocities increase with carbon number for the C2 –C5 RONO2. Dry deposition is a small daytime sink relative to photolysis and reaction with OH for the alkyl nitrates, but improves the model-measurement comparison for methyl nitrate.https://www.elementascience.org/articles/299Alkyl nitratesSourcessinksSeasonalityPhotochemical clockDeposition
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A. Abeleira
B. Sive
Robert F. Swarthout
Emily V. Fischer
Y. Zhou
D. K. Farmer
spellingShingle A. Abeleira
B. Sive
Robert F. Swarthout
Emily V. Fischer
Y. Zhou
D. K. Farmer
Seasonality, sources and sinks of C1–C5 alkyl nitrates in the Colorado Front Range
Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene
Alkyl nitrates
Sources
sinks
Seasonality
Photochemical clock
Deposition
author_facet A. Abeleira
B. Sive
Robert F. Swarthout
Emily V. Fischer
Y. Zhou
D. K. Farmer
author_sort A. Abeleira
title Seasonality, sources and sinks of C1–C5 alkyl nitrates in the Colorado Front Range
title_short Seasonality, sources and sinks of C1–C5 alkyl nitrates in the Colorado Front Range
title_full Seasonality, sources and sinks of C1–C5 alkyl nitrates in the Colorado Front Range
title_fullStr Seasonality, sources and sinks of C1–C5 alkyl nitrates in the Colorado Front Range
title_full_unstemmed Seasonality, sources and sinks of C1–C5 alkyl nitrates in the Colorado Front Range
title_sort seasonality, sources and sinks of c1–c5 alkyl nitrates in the colorado front range
publisher BioOne
series Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene
issn 2325-1026
publishDate 2018-06-01
description We describe observations of C1 –C5 alkyl nitrates made at the Boulder Atmospheric Observatory in Northern Colorado in winter 2011, spring 2015, and summer 2015. Average mixing ratios of the alkyl nitrates are similar across the seasons, but increased diel variability in summer suggests increased production balanced by increased loss relative to winter and spring. We use a sequential production-destruction model based on ratios of alkyl nitrates to their parent alkanes to investigate seasonal sources and sinks of C1 –C5 alkyl nitrates. We explore the role of uncertainties in the production and loss kinetic parameters on the interpretation of local atmospheric photochemical aging through the use of a photochemical clock based on the evolution of the ratios of alkyl nitrates to their parent alkanes over time. Photochemical age is typically consistent with hours from sunrise, suggesting that the site experiences well-mixed air masses dominated by daily photochemistry with little carry-over from the previous day or from other locations. Contrary to studies in other locations, we obtain good model-measurement agreement using a newer upper-bound ethyl nitrate branching ratios. This suggests that the efficiency of ethyl nitrate production from ethane oxidation has previously been underestimated, and decreases the relative importance of alkoxy radical decomposition versus ethane photochemistry on ethyl nitrate production. We estimate the dry deposition velocity of methyl nitrates is small and consistent with previous estimates, and that deposition velocities increase with carbon number for the C2 –C5 RONO2. Dry deposition is a small daytime sink relative to photolysis and reaction with OH for the alkyl nitrates, but improves the model-measurement comparison for methyl nitrate.
topic Alkyl nitrates
Sources
sinks
Seasonality
Photochemical clock
Deposition
url https://www.elementascience.org/articles/299
work_keys_str_mv AT aabeleira seasonalitysourcesandsinksofc1c5alkylnitratesinthecoloradofrontrange
AT bsive seasonalitysourcesandsinksofc1c5alkylnitratesinthecoloradofrontrange
AT robertfswarthout seasonalitysourcesandsinksofc1c5alkylnitratesinthecoloradofrontrange
AT emilyvfischer seasonalitysourcesandsinksofc1c5alkylnitratesinthecoloradofrontrange
AT yzhou seasonalitysourcesandsinksofc1c5alkylnitratesinthecoloradofrontrange
AT dkfarmer seasonalitysourcesandsinksofc1c5alkylnitratesinthecoloradofrontrange
_version_ 1725228605874634752